been sanding sanding sanding sanding,,
a highly figured piece of walnut...
does it ever end..
I file stocks or scrape them pretty smooth and raise the grain a few times before I start sanding. Raising the grain helps find rough spots. Sanding removes very little wood this way.
I use 220 (150 if is a really rough spot, coarser grits are for shaping if used at all) and raised the grain well it should be done in 3 grits, 220-320-400. Wetting after or during filing is a good idea since files and rasps can compress the wood then raise up the first time the wood is wet or even later. I use 220 to take off "high spots" along the forend with a hard flat backer, which I generally shape with a scratch stock. With the right backer and paper stuck to it I can sand very close to the forestock mouldings etc.
But you have to be careful when sanding that you do not go so deep they you break through the surface that has been raised. Use a light touch and in most cases a flat backer or a paper folded to stiffen it or backed with a piece of rubber hose (fuel or heater from auto parts) for contours.
Unless you are skilled in using a scraper they will cause more problems than they solve.
Many scraped rifles are too rough in both surface finish and often contour for the people I tend to sell to.
At 220 and 320 be REALLY careful and look for rough spots, scratches and such and take these out with the 220-320, if you go back to some really aggressive grit you are making more work. 400 and even 600 on maple will polish the wood and make final finish easier, though on walnut the filling process provides much of the fine polish. So I don't usually 400 grit walnut.
Dan