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I’m ready to start building a rifle and have zero chisels or gouges. That being said. What do I truly need as for size and shape? I plan on buying a stock with a barrel channel cut in and RR hole drilled. I appreciate the help.
 
I've used 1/2",1/4", and 1/8" flat chisels. The 1/8" I ground down from a 1/4" chisel. They are basic Stanley chisels. I have a variety of gouges 3/4" down to 1/8" with Swiss Pfeil being the best quality.
 
Don't go cheap on chisels. If you are going to make a habit of building guns, get the Pfeil chisels. They are expensive and worth every penny.
 
IMO, learning to sharpen is more important than the quality of the tools themselves. You need to sharpen more often and do so as soon as you notice dullind. Having said that, still buy the best you can afford and only cry once.

A long time ago I made some decent, small inletting chisels from USA concrete nails and a propane torch. Buy some O-1 stock as they are all chinesium metallurgy today and will not harden for me.
 
1/8, 1/4, 1 inch chisels. A small v and u gouge. An exacto or other good whittling knife. I prefer a spoke shave and a 35 mm wide #8 or #9 gouge instead of rasps to rough out a stock. You will need a way to sharpen the tools.
 
Thanks guy’s. This is enough to get me moving. Sharpening is no problem. My shop is set up for bows, but it seems a lot of my tools and holding devices will cross over.
 
I’m ready to start building a rifle and have zero chisels or gouges. That being said. What do I truly need as for size and shape? I plan on buying a stock with a barrel channel cut in and RR hole drilled. I appreciate the help.
Are you building from scratch? Or a kit? I would highly recommend an inexpensive kit as your first build. They don't require a lot of tools, you can buy them as you need them and if you think this is something you'd like to get involved in further, you can buy good tools. I've seen some beautiful kit builds both inexpensive and top shelf. Kibler? What can you say about that rifle that hasn't already been said. Attention to detail, fit and finish are everything! Have a blast. Listen I restored an antique. Look for it here. It's called , "Bridesberg Resurrection" you can probably get an idea what it's going to take.
 
From scratch. I put a Kibler together and enjoyed it very much, especially the end product for the $1200 I spent on it. But, it wasn't nearly enough for my hands to stay interested. A cheap kit from Traditions doesn't even start to interest me. I need much more detail and critical thinking to keep my interest piqued. I can handle a mostly scratch build. Hopefully I don't come across as arrogant. I'm not. I'm just very confident in my hands and mind.
 
I have only built 5 guns, the first two were blanks with barrel inletted and the ram rod hole drilled, two were pre-carves, one was a Kibler SMR, simple, but used the same tools.

My advice is not to buy a set of chisels or gouges, you will never use part of the set. The tools you use for shaping a bow are all you need for shaping a stock, I use a #49 Nicholson and transition to a half round Nicholson and sandpaper on a Sand Devil block for the finish shaping.

When I am inletting, I outline with an Exacto knife and use a 1/8" or 1/4" flat chisel for the straight lines and gouges for the rounder parts. I don't get in a hurry, I do my final fitting with a fine riffler file.

I second the making your own tools if you find you need something special that you don't have. I use concrete nails, beware, making these things is addictive, before long you will have a handful of them. Most of these are for scraping tight spots in inlets. I heat the nail, pound it out to shape, heat it and quench it in oil. I don't temper the tool after I make it, I have never had one break because the metal was brittle.

concrete nail tools.JPG


Here is an example; I have trouble getting a perfect inlet for the nose of a Late Ketland lock, I have used several of them. I got out a concrete nail and made a perfect gouge to cut this inlet. It might have taken me 15 minutes to make this tool.

nose chisel.jpg


nose chisel toooo.jpg
 
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From scratch. I put a Kibler together and enjoyed it very much, especially the end product for the $1200 I spent on it. But, it wasn't nearly enough for my hands to stay interested. A cheap kit from Traditions doesn't even start to interest me. I need much more detail and critical thinking to keep my interest piqued. I can handle a mostly scratch build. Hopefully I don't come across as arrogant. I'm not. I'm just very confident in my hands and mind.
You didn't come across arrogant at all. I was going by your first post. I thought you were a new guy. But please post your progress, plenty of guys way smarter then me will lend some solid advice. We like pictures to! Lol
 
I will certainly do that. I have to slowly buy what I need over the next few months to stay below the wife's radar.

A stock here and a lock there, you know ;)
 
i have always been skeptical of "kits" or "sets" of chisels .. my experience tells me that you use only a few of the set and the rest stay in the cool - looking box ... having saif that, i recommend that you have a good vise, a good vice (mine is single malt whiskey) and, first an foremost, that you figure out how to get your cutting tools as sharp as possible ...neurosurgery sharp ... there are a number of methods, including wet/dry sandpaper on float glass, as well as waterstones ... i like the wet/dry sandpaper better, because when the paper dulls out you can replace it for a few bucks... don't forget a strop and some polishing compound ... bunch of u-tube videos on this...

best of luck!
 
Single malt whiskey. I like where you're going. I'm a bourbon guy myself. But, wont turn down a few fingers of proper whiskey if offered.

Thanks for the sharpening tips.
 
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