kansas_volunteer
45 Cal.
I've been doing a little online research, and although I can't find any specific refereences to making gunstocks from chestnut. It seems like pretty high grade goods in many ways. I'd go ahead and try it. Given that it does split cleanly. I'd use a long tang and trigger bar and "splint" the grip, but otherwise it shouldn't be to difficult to deal with. Glass bed the tang, maybe.
I read somewhere years ago that some southern stocks were made of longleaf yellow pine, which is about as hard as walnut. You don't have to stick to traditional stock woods, as determined by modern weren't-there-and-didn't-do-it stock hackers.
Chestnut might have been the choice for a guy wanting a "barn gun" if that's what was available.It is certainly rot resistant enough to still stand in the corner of the barn long after the iron parts have rusted all to heck.
I read somewhere years ago that some southern stocks were made of longleaf yellow pine, which is about as hard as walnut. You don't have to stick to traditional stock woods, as determined by modern weren't-there-and-didn't-do-it stock hackers.
Chestnut might have been the choice for a guy wanting a "barn gun" if that's what was available.It is certainly rot resistant enough to still stand in the corner of the barn long after the iron parts have rusted all to heck.