The Golden Mean.....this is something that is bantered about quite a bit. I think a good gun builder can build a good gun
without the use of those wonderful "dividers" that I have seen. A good gunbuilder must have a "feel" for what he is
shaping, and a sense of proper proportion. I have always been somewhat of a skeptic about the golden mean, sure,
it works, but I have never been sure how to apply it to a raw piece of wood. After a gun is built, you can take those little dividers and say, gee, that cheek piece is 2/5 of the distance from the end of the lock panel to the butt plate, or gee whiz, look at this, the comb is 3/5 of the length of the buttstock from the end of the barrel to the butt plate. My question is, was it planned this way or did it just happen because the guy who built this gun had a good "eye"....that's what separates the great gunbuilders from the ho-hum gunbuilders. For those of you that use these little dividers, do you use
them merely as measuring tools to transfer measurements from a picture to the gun you are building? I can see that as
a useful tool, but it's not really "golden" to me...........Don