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Can this stock be fixed?

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I purchased this rifle from a forum member a couple of weeks ago. Everything about the process went great until I opened the box. It was shipped via USPS and it appears that they were rather rough with the package. The stock is curly maple and is broken all the way through. I am hoping you guys with experience repairing rifles can help. Thank you in advance.
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As long as the joint hasn't been impregnated/contaminated with oils and solvents, it can be glued.

Lightly grease the bottom of the barrel and keep it the barrel channel when you do your gluing up.

Zip ties work well to keep everything secure.
 
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I'd cut grooves on the inside of the barrel channel. I'd lay some steel rod in there, say 3/32" music wire Rough up the music wire on the grinder. I'd use glass bedding compound with black dye in it as the glue. For release agent I use a heavy coat of wax. It if fits use some siliconized parchment paper is good insurance. I do use grease because it makes a mess. Be sure and wax the outside of the stock. Hold the stock to the barrel with rubber bands, electrical tape or surgical tubing while it dries. IF you insert barrel retaining pins be sure the use long pins that are well waxed. Bend the pins in an L-shaper. Use music wire for temporary pins. You do not want them to stick and twist off. Clean up the glass bedding from the outside of the stock before it fully hardens.
 
Good advice above. Some period repairs of thin wood in a place like this used silk cloth glued flat onto the surface with hide glue. Today’s epoxies with some strong mesh latex in the barrel channel would span the crack and help stabilize it.
 
As long as the joint hasn't been impregnated/contaminated with oils and solvents, it can be glued.

Lightly grease the bottom of the barrel and keep it the barrel channel when you do your gluing up.

Zip ties work well to keep everything secure.
Acetone works well to remove old oil at least enough to get glue to set-up. It will start to dissolve the finish at the crack so be aware of that, but most times you'll get a good bond but the stock will never be perfect again.
 
Good advice above. Some period repairs of thin wood in a place like this used silk cloth glued flat onto the surface with hide glue. Today’s epoxies with some strong mesh latex in the barrel channel would span the crack and help stabilize it.
Good idea to add the cloth. I have used fiberglass and Kevlar.

There is no reason this stock can not be made far stronger than original an the repair nearly invisible.
 
I am in contact with the seller and he is reaching out to USPS. Luckily he had the shipment insured. What would you guys charge to fix this? Also, I am not confident enough at this point in time to attempt the fix myself. I will be looking to ship this to someone more qualified, and who can make this rifle look as close to perfect as possible once again.
 
So a question or two. Was this shipped assembled or unassembled? In my view there is no way the stock could be broken in that location with the barrel in place.
Is there any damage to the stock and or the shipping box? I am just trying to understand how in the world this happened.

The repair is certainly possible and it will be visible but only up close. Good luck and thanks in advance for responses to the above. As someone who occasionally ships longrifles I want to understand for obvious reasons.
 
So a question or two. Was this shipped assembled or unassembled? In my view there is no way the stock could be broken in that location with the barrel in place.
Is there any damage to the stock and or the shipping box? I am just trying to understand how in the world this happened.

The repair is certainly possible and it will be visible but only up close. Good luck and thanks in advance for responses to the above. As someone who occasionally ships longrifles I want to understand for obvious reasons.
It was shipped assembled. It was wrapped in some sheets and placed in a cardboard box. My best guess is that it was thrown over the back of a seat and landed on the side in just the wrong way. Impossible to ever know for sure.
 
I am in contact with the seller and he is reaching out to USPS. Luckily he had the shipment insured. What would you guys charge to fix this? Also, I am not confident enough at this point in time to attempt the fix myself. I will be looking to ship this to someone more qualified, and who can make this rifle look as close to perfect as possible once again.
I would make them pay to have it restocked, then do as you wish with repair or replace
 
It was shipped assembled. It was wrapped in some sheets and placed in a cardboard box. My best guess is that it was thrown over the back of a seat and landed on the side in just the wrong way. Impossible to ever know for sure.
there needs to be a video on how to box these guns put in the for sale rules, so idiots can box them properly, I add 1/4" underlayment to the inside of the box to give the gun protection from this, I have one coming and am hoping it is boxed properly,
 
I had the same crack on a rifle I bought once. I took a piece of .020'' lightly perforated steel shim stock 4'' long that fit the 3 bottom flats of the barrel real close. I embed this into the barrel groove over the crack so it set just a smidgen below into the stock under the barrel. I prepared my 30 minute epoxy with fine walnut dust , as this gives a little darker color , but gives binding fibers to the blend. I darken and solidify to taste with drops old english polish. Once the goo is ready I fixture stock down, paste the cracks if seperated , if stock still holding together, force glue into cracks. Then trowel some to the bottom of the undercut in the stock for the shim, place shim in puddle , then more goo over it . I then lay a piece of cling wrap over to protect the barrel from binding to glue goo. Assemble barrel to stock. Pin in place . Wipe off excess that will be flowing out from the channel area that you glued. Easy wipe off with low test alcohol from the medicine cabinet with multiple soft cloths . I use alcohol dipped ear swabs to clean area where it will overflow from the under barrel wrap. Moneture the project over the next hour for excess that still will squeeze out, let sit 24 hours, then gingerly remove barrel . Note that perforated shim stock piece should be douched down well with alcohol then let dry before insertion with minimal finger prints on it to ensure nest binding . If this is made properly with all three flats , perforations are patterned, it will be very strong and can not be bent by hand easily as like channel iron. I had five breaks on mine, it was heartbreaking. But now she is looking good, can hardly tell of her misfortune.
 
It was shipped assembled. It was wrapped in some sheets and placed in a cardboard box. My best guess is that it was thrown over the back of a seat and landed on the side in just the wrong way. Impossible to ever know for sure.
Thanks for the response, disappointed in the many failures on this.
The general lack of care from one or two people made the difference.
Package the piece correctly in a wooden crate or wood reinforced box and hope bubba the driver doesn’t run over it.😡
I have a lost shipment I’m dealing with now… it doesn’t seem to end.
Best of luck on the repair.
 
I'd say that was busted before it was shipped.
I am the sell/shipper. It was not busted before it shipped. I am honest and would not do that and resent your comment as I also resent anothers suggestion I am an "*****" for the way I packed it. I have shipped a number of ml longguns via USPS in the past with nary a problem. I believe it is repairable but I am not expert enough to do the job. Hopefully, the buyer will find someone who will take on the job. We will see what kind of settlement we can get from Uncle. I have offered the buyer a refund for return of the rifle as is. I do not want an unhappy relationship with anyone here, particularly a buyer.
 
I am the sell/shipper. It was not busted before it shipped. I am honest and would not do that and resent your comment as I also resent anothers suggestion I am an "*****" for the way I packed it. I have shipped a number of ml longguns via USPS in the past with nary a problem. I believe it is repairable but I am not expert enough to do the job. Hopefully, the buyer will find someone who will take on the job. We will see what kind of settlement we can get from Uncle. I have offered the buyer a refund for return of the rifle as is. I do not want an unhappy relationship with anyone here, particularly a buyer.
My apologies.
I have recently had extreme difficulties getting reimbursed for lost items via USPS. Cost me about 1000 bucks in the end. Have an actual receipt ready, they wouldn't accept a hand written receipt in my case. They are going to give you grief over "improper packing" no matter how well you packed it. I hope it all works out well.
 
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