I had my barrel channel finished in my sugar maple stock. I started to slab off extra wood on the sides, still staying away from my final dimensions. I have approximately a 1/2" wood left on either side of my barrel channel. I was preparing to get the bottom of my stock roughed in for my rod channel. I have been keeping the (44"x 13/16" .40 cal. rice) barrel in the channel when I am not working on the stock. Yesterday I noticed that my barrel looked bent in the channel. I checked with a 24" straight edge, and sure enough it was bowed slightly. I removed the very snug barrel and both barrel, and stock came back to shape.
Now to my questions. I may be over thinking this, but once the forestock is to final dimensions I should have no problems..correct?
I still need to remove a good 1.250-1.375" of wood from the bottom of the stock to prep for my ram rod groove and hole. I am concerned that things are going to be out of wack for drilling an accurate hole.
Is this common for a blank to do this? The stock sat in my shop for a good month before I started any work on it. The wood is from Virginia, and I am in Pennsylvania. I was thinking a month should be good for the initial humidity adjustments. Maybe I was wrong. I do understand that the wood will be moving it's whole life as a rifle, but I am just concerned about the amount of movement I am getting at this early stage of the build.