Quit doing total "scratch builds" in about 1974. To me , hacking out barrel channels and drilling perfect r/r holes , is a bore , when I could pay a master stock shaper a $120 to mill the barrel channel , shape the stock to one of 50+ patterns taken from existing originals , and he would also drill a r/r hole to near perfection , all in 1.5 hours. The $125 just was added on to the price of the wood blank. Since I had a real job and a family to support , those three very time consuming chores on a gun , was money well spent in buying back a week of evenings plus time on weekends spent doing the three above jobs on a build. I enjoy all the rest of the procedures in building m/l rifles.
Butt plates are time consuming , but a chore I prefer to do myself , as an incorrectly installed butt plate can ruin the looks of a rifle. The tools used to simplify a mundane job are a band saw , 1/4" wood chisel , a "safed " wood rasp , 1/4" die grinder w/ 1/2 " rasp bit , and Dremel type tool with 1/4 " drum shaped bit. Also , to speed up and maintain accuracy in positioning the already prepped sand cast butt plate , I've made a portable slightly elevated platform on which are mounted two identical cheap 4" jaw rotating base vises to hold the partially assembled gun. The additional 10" height of the contraption above my work bench allows me to see the alignment of butt plate to barrel sight plain. To speed prep of rough sand castings , if b/p tang has flats a 4" x 36" belt sander cuts time filing flats to zero. 1" X 42" belt sander eliminates the rest of butt plate prep to minutes. As they say, time is money, or time out on the shooting range , is priceless.........oldwood