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Joined: Dec 2001
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Sidelock
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You just paid for the chain saw, put it up for four (4) years and then put it through the plainer. I woul also start looking for bargin guns that need new stocks.
bill

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Sidelock
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With respects to JDW ---- I believe you should dry new blanks one years per inch in thickness. I'm in agreement with his ideas on racking with stickers. Jrry Fisher said he further ages them a few more years in the over head of his shop. FWIW



Ken Hurst
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Looks like you did OK as the slabs you show seem to have nice grain and color even with their rough cut surface. My advice would be to seal the ends ASAP and air dry flat in an unheated building with stickers between the slabs. Stay away from attics which get too hot. Then take some time to learn about proper gunstock layout. It's amazing how many wood dealers sell blanks with no concept of having grain flow through the wrist or having close straight grain at the head of a two piece stock. Making a stock is a lot of work and you don't want it to split or easily break. I made some templates out of plexiglass for rifle and shotgun which are oversize enough to encompass most makes and styles of shotguns and rifles. These I can lay on the slabs to find blanks with good layout while seeing the grain, pores, figure, and defects. Done right, the scrap wood pile is usually larger than the pile of stock blanks. Of course, much of the smaller off-cuts is useful for forends, handgun grips, knife handles, and assorted pieces to keep for stock repair.


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Sidelock
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I agree with Ken's estimate, but another way is to weigh them every few months. When they quit loosing weight, they are done (or your scale is not very precise).

Anyway, I like what I see of your wood and I would consider sealing the sides of crotch wood as it tends to develop stress cracks sometimes.

Brent


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You did very good, nice wood. Now seal the ends and put it somewhere out of the weather. I knew a fellow that owned a saw mill, mostly for furniture, and he used old paint laying around but wax is the best. Also like stated I would coat the knots, it may stop it from cracking, a 50-50 shot, if it starts to crack near the knot, drill a hole at the end of the crack and hope that it stops.
In about 1 year or so I would move them into a basement and let it dry further, and if you stack them, make sure you use stickers. In order to really see how much moisture you have you should get a moisture meter. A decent one is a Mini-Lingo that reads between 6-20% moisture and costs about $100. When the moisture content is down to about 10% you are gettng close to it being workable. Then it can be oversized and then let it acclimate to where it is going to be (house). Chekc the readings on good dry day in the area, not a rainy day as humidity affects the wood even indoors. Wood is always moving, expands in summer and contracts in winter-relative humidity.
You mentioned something about planning, if you do I hope you meant by hand, unless you have a planner with a spiral cutter and carbide inserts, as a regular knife blade will tear-out that irregular grain/figure. Even by hand with jointer plane you would have to cut it on an angle to avoid tear-out. This shouldn't be done anyway while the wood is still wet.

Good luck and let us know how you make out.

Last edited by JDW; 01/17/09 12:19 PM.

David


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David,
Do you think it would be best if he cut out the knots now? Why knot (:()?

The knots may not shrink as fast as the rest of the wood putting a lot more very uneven stresses into the plank

Brent


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Sidelock
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It wood take the stress from the rest of the board. With some of that crazy grain who knows what can happen.
A little faster way is to make your own on the spot solar kiln. Make a frame and cover with 4-6 mil clear plastic, put a fan at one end to blow over the wood and have a vent at the other.
I wouldn't do that right away maybe 6 months from now.
Some have even tried clamping presses to keep it flat


David


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Boxlock

Joined: Nov 2007
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Thanks to everyone for the advice and ecouragement found here! Does anyone have a suggestion as to guns that are easiest for beginners to stock?

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Martini actions are very simple around the head area...
RG

Joined: Mar 2008
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Sidelock

Joined: Mar 2008
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The boys and I was cutting firewood last sunday. We were working on a harvested walnut tree. I thought I would this a try. Ended up with this 5" thick chuck of walnut. Hopefully in 5 years I can restock a nice double with it.






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