This is very interesting.
I bend wood in my occupation as a luthier, so the woods I bend are generally about 1/8” thick. I have a friend who builds banjos and he bends thicker wood to form the resonator.
Bending wood requires heat if you intend to keep it in the bent shape. Steam is the best way to introduce enough heat into the wood to allow the fibers to bend and, if held in place, it will retain much of the radius, though we often get some spring back. And these are flat slats of wood.
If you are going to try and bend a rifle stock that is already channeled out, I fear you are on a fool’s errand, the amount of heat and then the pressure exerted on that shape will most certainly break in one way or another. But who knows, stranger things have been accomplished!
My thought is if it can be returned for a good one, do that.
Good luck to you!
I bend wood in my occupation as a luthier, so the woods I bend are generally about 1/8” thick. I have a friend who builds banjos and he bends thicker wood to form the resonator.
Bending wood requires heat if you intend to keep it in the bent shape. Steam is the best way to introduce enough heat into the wood to allow the fibers to bend and, if held in place, it will retain much of the radius, though we often get some spring back. And these are flat slats of wood.
If you are going to try and bend a rifle stock that is already channeled out, I fear you are on a fool’s errand, the amount of heat and then the pressure exerted on that shape will most certainly break in one way or another. But who knows, stranger things have been accomplished!
My thought is if it can be returned for a good one, do that.
Good luck to you!