Well I'm a newbie so I hope I did it correctly. I found a heavy piece of maple that had sort of a slight curve to the grain and the thought occurred to me that this flow would run straight through the wrist area of the stock- so I bought the wood and laid out the pattern so that the grain ran straight from the lock down through the wrist- I hope that was correct. This particular rifle is a plains rifle so I can leave the wrist a little heavy and it ought to still be okay.
When you say "it breaks across the grain" please explain to a newbie. Thanks.
Another issue, is a poorly inlet stock more prone to break? In other words will the recoil of the barrel and tang bear against less wood and cause a break more easily? So far I'm pretty happy with my inlet job. The barrel to wood fit is good and the breech plug face seems pretty good. I've wondered if glass bedding the area would strengthen the area but the fit seems so good I'm pretty much against it plus I would far prefer a gun without any modern things such as glass bedding.
The tang bolt: should the hole be such that the bolt fits tightly or, should the hole be oversized so the bolt connects the tang and trigger plate but does not contact or bear against any wood? Or does it make any difference?
In the lock area, I'm planning to remove as little wood as possible in the interest of strength. I'm going to pin the trigger. Does a higher trigger weaken the stock as the inlet is deeper? Also most pre-carved stocks use a router, etc and I think excess wood is removed. Am I over doing this?
And...what about adding weight? Some makers of shotguns add lead in hidden areas to the stock with the idea a heavy gun recoils less. My barrel is 54 caliber and 15/16 so the recoil is pretty good. I'm not sure where adding weight could be done- I was thinking some holes behind the butt plate. Has anyone ever done such or am I again over doing things? I don't mind recoil- I want more recoil to help prevent a cracked wrist.
I'm also thinking about a very thin metal plate on the wood in front of the lock so the area doesn't get charred. Same thing on the wood beside the breech plug.
In the interest of having as heavy a gun as possible I've optioned for a large buttplate- hence larger amount of wood/weight; and was thinking a heavier wrist, and a little larger cheek piece.
I've made some guns from kits but it is a lot more fun to work from a blank. I am learning an awful lot more. In any event, any comments greatly appreciated. Thanks.