What are your thoughts? Workability, staining, and how does it compare to hard maple? Pics please, we all love to see those beautiful rifles. Thanks
Oh wow, I had no idea.Kibler's use red maple for many of their kits.
That's good to know. ThanksRed maple is softer than hard or sugar maple, it will show dings and scratches more readily. Just my experience working with it
Gorgeous rifle, thanks for sharing.At least 2/3 of the curly maple stock blanks out there are red maple. It often stains more honey and molasses than warm reddish tones with aquafortis.
True but from the looks of it Mr. Pierce is a master. Me... not so much. Thanks for the info.I have some friends who are working with red maple. One of them is skilled in the art and says that the red maple stock he received is too soft to take nice raised carving without a lot of extra care compared to sugar maple. The carving on the Rich Pierce gun looks excellent from here.
I think this may be a case of "common" names not being particularly accurate.I think this is how the hardness scale works out.........Hardest is Chestnut maple , next...Sugar maple, then.....Hard red maple , med. hard red maple , soft red maple. Black maple parallels red maple. , Finally......White maple , it comes from those huge maple trees growing near water , and in damp areas. All can be curly , or plain , or anything in between. The hardest , chestnut maple , can have birds eye , tortoise shell , quilted , and curl , or all in one blank. In a half century , I've seen only a half dozen Chestnut maple stock blanks. Chestnut maple is heavy , dense , beautiful , and miserable to work. I hated buying some , 40 yrs.ago , but I did. Live and learn..
Acer rubrum is the only red maple. It varies a lot in hardness, some of it overlapping sugar maple’s range of hardness. A lot of top makers use red maple, and carve it exquisitely. Keep in mind that walnut and red maple overlap in hardness and American walnut was THE gun stock wood in the cartridge era.I think this may be a case of "common" names not being particularly accurate.
As I understand it, there are two "hard maple" species in the US -- sugar and black maple (acer saccharum and acer nigrum, respectively). Those are the only two I would consider using for a stock. The red maple that grows around the great lakes (acer rubrum) is much softer and much weather than either of the two hard maple species -- and I would seriously doubt that any gun maker actually uses that. It would be almost as bad as making a gun stock out of poplar or pine!
Does anyone know the actual genus/species of the "red maple" supposedly being used by Kibler?
I've noticed a difference in the cost of figured red vs hard. Thanks for your input on this thread.Acer rubrum is the only red maple. It varies a lot in hardness, some of it overlapping sugar maple’s range of hardness. A lot of top makers use red maple, and carve it exquisitely. Keep in mind that walnut and red maple overlap in hardness and American walnut was THE gun stock wood in the cartridge era.
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