Dear Guys,
At a recent gunshow, I picked up a really beat-up stock for the Winchester 54, with the schnable forend. I paid very little for it, as it is full of cracks and dings. I figured that just as a hobby, I would try to restore it and re-sell it.
I am very experienced at refinishing old stocks, and repairing the cracks, nicks and dings. But I have zero experience with checkering.
I think these stocks were cut 20 lines to the inch. This particular stock still has all of the checkering in place, but it is nearly flat, from handling and probably from a refinish job years ago. I would like to re-cut this checkering, just using the existing grooves that are already there.
Since the grooved lines are already there, can anybody tell me exactly what tools I would need to recut (i.e., deepen) the checkering? Perninent facts: (i) this stock is over 80 years old, and the wood is harder than iron, (ii) if I mess it up, it will not be a great tragedy, (iii) it doesn't need to look gorgeous or perfect, just nice. When I am done, it will only qualify as a nice shooters stock, not a restoration piece.
I don't want to spend a fortune on the tools. So, I am looking for the minimum number of tools (which I assume I would order from Brownells).
I have actually considered just taking my dremel tool, putting a really thin cut-off wheel in it, and tracing lightly over the lines. A problem with doing this, is that these type of wheels tend to "burn" wood, and put black lines in them. So, I have abandoned the idea.
I read with interest the FAQ sheet on checkering posted by GunNut. It is a fabulous piece, but way over my head for the simple thing I want to do.
Thanks for all advice.
Mannyrock