Hello Guys
Down here in New Zealand can be a bit frustrating as we can't get all the goodies that you folk up in the USA can.
So my barrel stubbed handi in 303-25 needed a new fore end, and a wet weekend here was just what I needed.
Here is the result - its my first ever go at stock making, but all in all I'm quite pleased, it was supposed to just be a pattern for something better to follow but maybe I'll keep it. It's still to be sanded and finished but there's always next weekend for that !!
I used a local timber, its really a bit soft for stockmaking but it was what I had to hand, and as it won't be checkered I think it'll be ok. I cut the blank into 3 pieces and laminated them back together for a bit of stability in a long stock.
This rifle is nice and short and I can see it becoming my favourite carry rifle in the mountains (all up weight as pictured is exactly 7 lbs), so it had to resemble a mountain rifle, and what better to copy than those used in the Austrian alps - a Kipplaufbuschen I think is the term. Hopefully it'll get me a chamois here too.
I started to copy the schabel from my Brno (CZ) 452 22 rf but it sorta got away on me a bit, they are a lot harder to do than they look. I didn't have a spare plastic forend spacer, so just used wood right up to the action - which is why the fore end is quite full there, I didn't want any really small bits that would break off. I'll use penetrating epoxy on this area to impove the strenght of the wood.
I had to make a barrel band to hang the fore end from, and getting that tapered caused me a few headaches. I also made an extra band at the muzzle, the wood is real thin there (it is thinner than it looks in the photo) and the rifle will get hard use.
Now all I have to do is finish working up loads and shoot it, then we'll go hunting.
Cheers - Foster