appalichian hunter
75 Cal.
- Joined
- Oct 28, 2018
- Messages
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I am a lefty, and been waiting on Mr. Kibler to make a lefty southern kit, keep hoping, good luck on the build and keep us informed of the progress.
I think I read in one of Dave Person's post that he has filed the tops of the barrel breech end to get a more pleasing curve but I cannot remember where I read it.
He had to then cheat the lines on the flats. It may help you a little but obviously not entirely.
Could maybe use a maple patch?????
I think you are right a slight bevel on the tang will also help bring it all into line.
As a woodworker, it hurts to see discussions of patching that stock with acraglas. I'd much rather see wood Dutchmen slightly larger than the holes, and new inletting cut in from scratch. If you're careful about grain match and a little creative with aging and finishing, you'd be surprised what you can get away with..
I solidly agree. There is always an error put into every one I have ever made.As a woodworker, it hurts to see discussions of patching that stock with acraglas. I'd much rather see wood Dutchmen slightly larger than the holes, and new inletting cut in from scratch. If you're careful about grain match and a little creative with aging and finishing, you'd be surprised what you can get away with..
Might be right, but cost of new stocks/parts right now is not only absurd. but climbing daily. The joy of inflation is just now being passed down to the ML community with a sledge hammer.You know, some things are just not worth salvaging.
Sorry, get a new piece of wood, and build a gun.
You're rear lock bolt is going to have to go through the breech plug on the inside of the barrel or skirt it by at least half the bolt thickness. The bridle screw hole is about the position the lock bolt hole should go. I like resurrection projects but I'd scrap it I believe. If not I'd weld or solder a chunk of steel on the back of the lock plate to make the lock bolster longer so I have something to drill for the lock bolt.
Thanks for suggestion. I like all my "resurrection's" more than factory finished ones. "FrankenFlinter" may be last as age is closing in fast and costs are rapidly outweighing fun factor. Heading out to shop now to do battle again. If anyone can identify the butt and toe plate inletting it would be a blessing. I really need a recent TOTW catalog. They are out of print now as well.Hi, I think you have a great chance to make a rifle that when completed you can take pride in. I would check out a breech plug with more flare and wider. The stock looks like it has a fine curl and will finish nicely. As you mentioned slow is good.
You can print the page from the on line catalog. The print will be close to actual size. Compare the print measurements to the specified measurements and adjust the size using your printer as a copier.Thanks but current TOTW catalog says out of stock, wish i had access to one. Buttplate and toeplate are gonna be a PITA!!
I will try that today. thanks!!You can print the page from the on line catalog. The print will be close to actual size. Compare the print measurements to the specified measurements and adjust the size using your printer as a copier.
Thanks will try to do that before final finish. This area shape combined with other stuff like screwed on parts (instead of pinned) and strange fittings really add to mystery of where and when. While i was at gun works i had time to examine the racks of rifles for the best and worst of others work. If i can get to the middle i will be happy. The 5/16" ramrod set up also strikes me as weird.I think you've found a fun project and a good learning opportunity.
Since you're going to "save" the stock and lock mortise, you will need to "patch" where the wood is missing, and so perhaps you might also want to reshape the profile of the mortise to a more symmetrical shape, and match the wood shape for the side plate on the other side?
View attachment 81172
While she will never be a beauty queen to those who don't know the back-story (beauty is in the eye of the beholder, too) , when completed..., comparing the finished rifle with what you started should be very satisfying. Especially if she shoots. Probably will be a great "field rifle" as pretty much no matter what happens while hunting, it's never going to be as bad as where you started.
LD
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