Rangefogger
40 Cal
- Joined
- Apr 1, 2021
- Messages
- 231
- Reaction score
- 388
How do you builders carve such a straight line for the moldings on your rifles? What tools do you use? Any tips for a beginner? Thanks a million!
Wow 150+ rifles… I hope I can get there some day. Thanks for the advice!This might be a little controversial , but I'm not one for making things more difficult than they need to be. To make a straight line on a gunstock , like on the forearm. Measure down from a known point , like the top barrel flat using a 6" adjustable square , and mark with a pencil. To make fine lines on wood , get #4 hard lead pencils. #2's are soft lead , and dull too quickly , rendering fat imprecise lines. Aluminum 1/16 " hardware store rulers , are more flexible to make the best lines. However , a piece of 3/8" thin angle aluminum stock is absolutely inflexible , and render very straight lines. Ok.......Now we've put a long , really fine pencil line on the forearm. To start the line grooving process , use a fabric cutting razor wheel. Just roll it on the line a time or two. A round double ended checkering file , will cut out the line easily in a pass or two. If a compound line is desired , a double line checkering tool , or to get even more artistic , use a skip a line checkering tool. Another suggestion , take a sharp , 1/4" basic wood chisel and cut one side of the vee trench away , sand with a strip of fine sand paper. You have created a forearm molding , as easily as I can tell you how. I like easy..............oldwood. Using a vee chisel for any carving on a gunstock , is something not in my pay grade. I had a friend that back in the 1970's was an apprentice at the Colonial Williamsburg Gunshop.. The folks there , did some research about the ways old time gunsmiths did carving. The results of their findings , changed the way I think about wood carving. The above info is only a small portion , of how I have worked scratch building the 150 + rifles I created.
I just found his video’s the other day. He does do awesome work.Look up Peter Follansbee on You Tube, he spent 20 yrs at Plymouth Plantation building and repairing 16th century furniture, and that stuff is fully carved, his work is awesome and he only uses hand tools that where avaliable back then, some of his videos are instructional
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