I went with the laminated stock and forend from Arthur Brown.
Can you get WCG's bar and forend that might match it (Nutmeg)?
I would have never thought about using 30-06 brass. That's great info because I'm setting up some reloads right now.
I think I'll have a shooter by the end of the day.
Bill
Virgin Valley's hanger bar is spaced so that the screws for the posts go
into the holes for the original forearm screws. Then their forearm screws
go into holes on the hanger bar itself. The forearm is recessed (I believe
by a router) to accept the hanger bar and fit around the barrel. Therefore,
it's doubtful that any other forearm will fit, unless Bullberry hanger bars
and forearms are set up identical to Virgin Valley's.
I used 30-06 military brass (5 cents each) back in the '70's to size down
to 25-06 cases. Takes quite a bit of neck trimming, but worked great.
Just never thought of false shouldering 'til a helpful gentleman suggested
doing so. If you shoot a cartridge, and attempt to resize it and either
you get a crunched shoulder, or a neck pushed down into the shoulder,
then the chamber is too long for your sizing setup. That's the quickest
(and cheapest) way to tell if you have the same problem as I do. The
simplest remedy is then to back off threads on your resizing die. In my
case, there was just too much play in the chamber for virgin brass to
get any accuracy at all. That's why I had to go to the next caliber up
and wildcat it with a false shoulder, and then back WAY off the resizing
die (compared to a correctly reamed chamber) for the next reload.
After what you are doing, it should be a shooter. The only thing that
could cause accuracy failure, is an off-center chamber. Let's hope that
is not the case.