Guest
My wife and I were discussing my next rifle build last night on the way home from dinner... she was telling me to go to Lowe's and get some scrap wood to start practicing carving and such on. I was explaining to her that ya can't practice on pine and then expect the same thing to happen when you start carving on curly maple or walnut, "It just don't work like that." She then asked about oak, and why gunstocks aren't ever made of oak?
The only thing I could come up with, that wasn't pure speculation, was that I needed to pose the question here on the forum, because I had no idea. She thought it might be a weight issue, but then I mentioned that walnut isn't light... and maple probably isn't either. I've seen stocks out of cherry and ash too, but never oak.
So why is it that you never see a stock made out of oak?
The only thing I could come up with, that wasn't pure speculation, was that I needed to pose the question here on the forum, because I had no idea. She thought it might be a weight issue, but then I mentioned that walnut isn't light... and maple probably isn't either. I've seen stocks out of cherry and ash too, but never oak.
So why is it that you never see a stock made out of oak?