After installing the grip cap and fitting it, I found that there was too much of a gap where the grip was rounded off.
I decided to hide the gap, I would add a white spacer and fill in the missing wood with some saw dust and glue. I also switched to #4 screws, the #3s were a little too short/small to begin with
Mixing up the glue/saw dust
Grip cap installed and glue/saw dust mixture applied.
After curing for 24hrs I filed and sanded it down
Getting closer
This is a 220 grit finish, still some areas to work over
I wetted the wood with a damp rag, this helps identify the sanding and filing marks that need to be removed as well as raises the grain
In case you were wondering, this is what walnut looks like when the grain is raised....like metal, it often looks worse before it looks better
A 400 grit finish, ready for the oil
We'll be using Minwax Antique Oil Finish
The first coat is rubbed in hard with the palm of my hand, then cured for 24hrs.
Like a dummy, I forgot to inlet the front sling swivel before applying the oil....Here is what I plan on using, it is the rear sling swivel mount from a Mauser K98 rifle, it is similar to the one Ruger used on the original Sporter Finger Groove
I started by clamping the stock down to the bench and center punching the holes
I drilled the holes
Then started removing wood
Then I realized I needed to relieve some wood to make room for the swivel
I had seen old Winchester model 70s with two screw swivels had reliefs cut to make room, here are a couple I found online
Here is another solution, remove wood around the swivel so it sits up on an island.
Here is what I came up with, I ended up having to plug one of the holes as it was no longer centered after I inletted the mount
I made the rear swivel using a loop that I found in a box of parts for $1 (I am pretty sure it is a factory Ruger part) and a standard swivel stud. I had to trim the swivel stud down to fit the loop
Test fit, I will blue it with the other parts before installing
In part three we will get back to filling the grain on the stock
+1
ReplyDeleteNice wood work...sure can`t do that with synthetic stocks..!!
ReplyDelete