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Joined: Apr 2006
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OP
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Back in 2006 I was visiting home and went out to see my great-aunt at her place, where I deer hunted as a kid. The house was built in the 1870s, and includes a spring in the woods down the hill. An ice storm had hit the night before and the forest was a bit of a mess. Regardless, I wanted to walk around and see all the old deer stands and soak in the memories. Most of the men who occupied those stands are dead now or live far away. As I got to the spring I saw the old sugar maple that grew beside it had split down the crotch in the storm. It looked as though there might be a bit of figure to the wood laying there on the ground. My cousin said he planned to turn the lot of it into firewood, but wouldn't mind if I used the chainsaw to slab off a bit for whatever project I might be able to use it for. I used it to fit up a gun! Several years ago I bought a No. 3 in .223. I sent it off to JES for conversion to my favorite big game round, the 9.3X62, and then sent two blanks from my well dried maple to Custom Rifle Stocks in Aaronsburg, PA. He did a great job profiling the blank and drilling the hole for the stock bolt. Between kids, work, and general adulting it took a couple years to get this one done, but I'm pleased with the results. I still need to inlet some sling swivel studs, and perhaps some day I'll checker it, but for now I plan to enjoy the last three weeks of deer season with it! I love the fact that now I get to kill deer in a Alaska using a rifle stocked with wood that grew about 150 yards from where I killed my first buck, with wood from a tree men who were my heros walked by.....you get the idea. I slimmed down the forend and added an ebony tip. It was apparent the factory lever would be a problem with the No.1 style wood and any sort of recoil so I cut off the tail of the lever and had a tool and die micro-welder weld it back on to my specs before filing and bluing it. With the Vari-X III in weaver mounts, it weighs 8 pounds on the nose loaded. The weather here has been pretty poor for any sort of accuracy testing, but sighting it in at 50 yards produced some one hole groups in-between bouts of wind blowing the target over. It seems to like 250gr Accubonds and Varget. Now I need to go blood it.
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Campfire Outfitter
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Campfire Outfitter
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All American
All the time
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Campfire Regular
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Superb, on so many levels! Looking forward to seeing the hero pics with it.
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Joined: Jan 2019
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Campfire Regular
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Nice.
I have a #3 in 223 that I have been playing around with ideas of a custom job. Actually fitted a butt stock to it and halfway through shaping the forearm, but put the parts aside until I really figure out what I want to do with it. I have shot a deer with it already. Just trying to figure out the caliber I would have it rebarreled to if I go that route. Love it as a plain #3, but also think it would be really cool in a fast twist 22 something.
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Joined: Oct 2008
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That is simply fantastic. Thanks for sharing. Truly a special rifle.
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Campfire Regular
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Very nice, you have some skills for sure.
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Wag more, bark less.
The freedoms we surrender today will be the freedoms our grandchildren will never know existed.
The men who wrote the Second Amendment didn't just finish a hunting trip, they just finished liberating a nation.
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Joined: Nov 2008
Posts: 6
New Member
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New Member
Joined: Nov 2008
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I love blued steel and figured wood or any kind, but...wow! What a beautiful rifle you have built with a beautiful story of coming "full circle" so to speak. An heirloom for sure, congrats!!!! AC
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Joined: Feb 2011
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Campfire Ranger
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Campfire Ranger
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Molon Labe
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Joined: Apr 2006
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Campfire Tracker
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OP
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Thanks for the kind remarks fellas. Nice.
I have a #3 in 223 that I have been playing around with ideas of a custom job. Actually fitted a butt stock to it and halfway through shaping the forearm, but put the parts aside until I really figure out what I want to do with it. I have shot a deer with it already. Just trying to figure out the caliber I would have it rebarreled to if I go that route. Love it as a plain #3, but also think it would be really cool in a fast twist 22 something. Can't wait to see how your project works out! Proportionally, a 24" barrel would look better if one were to stick with the original forend length, as one of the faults with the original No. 3 which I carried over to my rifle is the length of the forend in ratio to the barrel length. I planned to shorten mine to a more aesthetically pleasing length, but after drawing and mocking one up I discovered that for my long arms something nice to look at wouldn't be practical for use. I need more length, so it is what it is. My rifle's forend is the factory length including the ebony tip. This was my first work with ebony. The stuff is like cast iron! Another thing I had to work out was the stock color. It seems alot of maple stocks on modern guns end finished like a gym floor. I took a hint from the world of traditional muzzleloading and stained the wood with Laurel Mountain Forge walnut color stain before finishing with a genuine tung oil finish.
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Joined: Jan 2001
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Campfire Ranger
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Campfire Ranger
Joined: Jan 2001
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Great wood, and the fit looks better than factory. What type of application(single/multiple) did one use to obtain that color and finish?
Last edited by 1minute; 01/05/21.
1Minute
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Campfire Tracker
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That’s a truely beautiful rifle! Checkering, would give it a completed custom look.
BT53 "Where do they find young men like this?" Reporter Savidge, Iraq Elk, it's what's for dinner....
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Campfire Ranger
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Campfire Ranger
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Jeezuey that's nice! And I love the backstory too. Good juju in that gun now!
"You can lead a man to logic, but you cannot make him think." Joe Harz "Always certain, often right." Keith McCafferty
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Joined: Mar 2003
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Campfire Ranger
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Campfire Ranger
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That's pretty special looking. I think everyone would like one like that.
Randy NRA Patriot Life Benefactor
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Absolutely gorgeous! Tell us what You did to bring out the contrast in the wood. Glad You kept from the woodstove, nice bit of connection to home and family there.
"...One Nation under God, indivisible, with Liberty and Justice for All"
JeffG
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Campfire Ranger
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That’s purty purdy. 😁 Love it
NRA Life,Endowment,Patron or Benefactor since '72.
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Campfire Tracker
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OP
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I did three coats of stain and then seven coats of oil. The tung oil finish mix I made didn’t develop any gloss until the fifth coat. I knocked it back a bit but left it fairly glossy. I’m curious how well the Burris rings in weaver mounts will hold up, as I’ve never used them much before. As this project went along I accumulated Weaver, Redfield, and original Ruger bases but I like the looks of the Burris/Weaver combo the best.
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Really nice , I Love the #3’s customized. I have a few , I use sulphuric acid to stain maple. It turned reddish and soaks deep Really nice job
Keep your head on the stock,wood on wood
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