I'm new at this. Sorry to keep throwing that disclaimer out there, but it seems warranted. You may soon see why
But I was wondering a few things... I noticed many gun blanks are a bit thin, I mean, they REALLY cut them close for most rifles. Many blanks are 2" or less thick, and I just measured the precarve I got, an Issac Haines, and it would require 2 1/8" bare minimum to pull it off, and that would be with the rear corner of the cheek piece touching one side of the blank and the opposite side butt-end touching the other. No extra. Seems tough to lay that out in a 1 7/8 or 1 3/4" blank.
So, since I've done a lot of heating and bending of wood for bows, I got to wondering, why couldn't a fella who was shy of wood thickness in a blank, rough in the gun on a single centerline, or get what he could, then heat the wrist area and push the butt stock over to create cast off?
Anyone ever tried it, or heard of it?