I have an instructor who does not like working with cherry, he says the grain pattern can be too unpredictable among other things. I'll give it a go once I find a blank that is both suitably dense and reasonably cheap.Rich, that rifle it wildly cool! Did you make it yourself or is it an original? It's hard to tell with you talented builders.
Stoner made a cherry for my son once, brass furniture, lock plate, blued barrel, hammer, frizzen, frizzen spring. 1-Looks beautiful! He said never again… Im suprised he hasn’t said anything!!!
Obviously some cherry is quite suitable. It was often used in New England on fowlers, rifles,and muskets that survive to this day.
I agree with Mr. Brooks, it can be soft and even spongy in texture. I do like Cherry furniture. Another thing to keep in mind is the style of rifle or fowler and whether cherry would be appropriate. I have seen later period rifles made of cherry that I think looked good, but it does not suit my eye on earlier pieces. Where I am from (the southern Appalachian Region) I have never seen a large enough piece of cherry lumber to make a stock that did not have a split in it. Cory Joe
Here's a plain short rifle from several years ago. Got the stock off the back porch of Gunmaker's Hall at Friendship and think it set me back $30 or so. The barrel was an old length of 1" straight which I had hand swamped with a file. The color achieved with touch of cheap oven cleaner.