Here I thought the discussion would be about the triggerguard being different, because of it being hand made & riveted rather than a cast one. :idunno: and we end up discussing screw head alignment..... :redface:
So........., just to change the subject :grin: and also several have emailed me about the details of making the triggerguard..... so here goes...
The triggerguard is made from 3 pieces of 1/8" x 3/4" flat steel. Front part is heated & bent in a vice & the bow is heated & slowly bent to conform to the shape of the bow of a cast Bean guard. The tail part then made & the curved part heated & bent over a bolt to give it the curve I wanted. The middle part (Rail) where your fingers grip up against the wrist was extended as I wanted it longer to get my fingers in there comfortably, so it is about 1" longer there than a normal Bean guard. The tips of each end of the rail are ground & shaped in a vine leaf shape & then heated & bent to conform to the bow & tail piece, again heating & bending them over a bolt.
I then took it all to the 2" x 72" belt sander with a 40 grit belt & ground them to the width & rough contour I wanted.
Now to the stock & clamped the front & rear to the stock & set the rail in & made my bends to adjust to the curve in the wrist.
Got everything positioned & marked the bow & tail, where the rail sits on them. Drill 2 holes in the rail on each leaf tip. Take it back to rifle & sit guard on there & run drill thru new holes to use as a guide to insure things stay in place.
Countersink both sides of rivet hole, clean & put solder flux in between parts to be riveted. Make rivet from piece of 16 ga copper wire. Peen a head over on one side of rivet, install into bow & take to vice & peen the rivet down. Repeat on tail end of guard. Now drill other two holes on guard & rivet & peen them. Take a file & clean off the rivet heads til they are flush.
Then to the torch & heat & suck the silver solder into the joint. Let cool, bead blast, file & clean up solder joints.
Back to the belt sander/grinder & final shaping. Then to the vice for filing & finish shaping & sanding & etc. Drill & countersink the holes for the mounting screws.
Inlet the guard, drill the screw holes, put a lil patch lube in the wood screw holes, insert screws & you pretty much have the guard made, & mounted to the rifle.
Now, some of you are not thinking :hmm: "Good Lord, you could have bought the damn guard for $20. and it took ya all day !!" :shocked2: This is true & a cast one would be fine if that is what you want (builders or customers choice), however, I wanted something different for this rifle as it is going in a display collection of southern rifles & I don't want it like any other there. :thumbsup:
PS: For those that don't know........ Allot of the old original southern rifles had the triggerguards, buttplates, toeplates & nosecaps riveted with copper rivets, thus why this one was done that way. :v
:hmm: :shocked2: