Very much appreciate your insight, Mike. To address the web issue, I got rid of as much wood as I could. I skorped out the original ramrod channel almost 3/8 and took away the wood around it so the ramrod is still pretty exposed. I also scraped the wood down to about 1/3 of the side flats. The forestock is still kind of rounded and wide and I'll probably thin that some, but it's the backbone, so to speak, of the rifle, so I'm hesitant to thin it out too much. Plus, I really like the feel of the rifle as the stock smooths out. This is a shooter, not a copy of somebody elses rifle, so that has to count for something.
Have trimmed back the lock panels a bit and am getting a feel for how they should look for my next gun. In my next pics I think you'll notice them smaller and better fitted to the lock size, also similar on both sides. Not sure how well I'll be able to do with this, but we'll see.
I did the stock repair today. A popsicle stick (basically) thinned, and inletted into the forestock and the nosecap support piece, the acraglassed the $#*! out of it (per frogwalker). The nosecap is on forever now, at least I think. I "release-agented" the barrel multiple times so hopefully no sticking. Will check in the morning and post pics if it works.
Still working on the architecture. Possibly need some smaller and better rasps and files. May drive up to Woodcraft and see what thy have in the afternoon. The stock mass TVM sends out is huge. Getting rid of the excess wood is hard because I have trouble visualizing what it should be. Still, forging on.
After looking at what tool makers want for a skorp or scraper, I made my own versions which worked pretty good. I have one commercial scraper which is excellent, but the home made versions work pretty well also for the specific tasks they were made for.
So tomorrow, the bill is check the stock repair. If it's good, take the rifle apart and start sanding and prepping the wood for finish, including some reshape where it seems appropriate to my untrained eye. Doing a lot of picture looking and comparing it to the two rifles I have on hand, a TVM and a Robert Taylor build. Both are simple but good classical lines to compare.
BTW, I'm striping the ramrod. I've seen a couple rifles like that and think it is a classy effect. I'm told Virginia rifles had that ramrod pattern on more than a few occasions.
Thanks again for all comments and critiques. I'll do my best to keep you all posted.