Capt. Flint.. I'm with you. When I'm trapped by some mistake , or some stock shaper's mistake , or have to fix a stock w/ a break or ingrown bark inclusion , or just lengthen a forearm , out comes the dyed 5 min. epoxie , and a thin plastic shopping bag for release agent and the fix is in. Years ago I tried to make my barrel inletting tight and as flawless as possible. Then ran into a prominent m/l gun stock precarver that was teaching a "how to build it" m/l class in a local high school shop . His inletting was tight and flawless done on a Don Allen 5 axis stock carving machine. He noticed some of the classes finished rifles shot tight groups right from the git -go , and others had inconsistency problems. Anyway , the grouping problems were caused by tightly clamping thin weight barrels in place when drilling the barrel pins . Once the pin holes were longitudinally slotted , that problem disappeared. Another interesting thing that affected my barrel inletting was looking at old original rifles from the inside out. By todays standards , the inletting was pretty bad. Many barrel inlets thought an octagon barrel shape were inlet into a round inlet. Can understand the old time thinking , time is money and how many hammer/chisel blows is reasonable and since it doesn't affect accuracy what is the sense??? Don't get me wrong , their's no substitute for good craftsmanship , but it becomes obsession after a while. I could go on...........oldwood