I recently heard from a buddy of mine who cautioned me against using any maple (red or sugar) with alot of curl (grade 5 or 6) for a large caliber rifle because alot of curl weakens the stock.
Is there any truth to this or is this an "old wives tale" ? I know little about the maple family.
Thanks,
Martin
Large bore MLs? How large? 69 caliber? 10 Bore? 54-58-62 are really medium small/medium bores to the British of the 19th century.
If you break curly Sugar Maple its not going to be from recoil. I have a friend who built some Bedford school rifles with wrists about the diameter of a quarter.
Hard maple is probably the best stock wood used commonly in North America. Far better than black Walnut.
There is a reason bowling pins are made from hard maple.
Getting the grain "right" in a mail order stock, IE grain running right down the wrist is near impossible in my experience. This is greatly overrated anyway. It may be easier to get if making a 1/2 stock.
Stocks with grain running straight down the wrist like the split through the lockbolt hole and down the wrist in quarter sawn stocks.
So I don't sweat it too much.
If wrist flow really worrys you ask for a plank sawn blank. Will likely be cheaper anyway since it will not show vivid curl in the sides of the stock but the wrist will be stronger.
Breaking wrist in normal use is not all that easy.
Dan