Hello again folks, I have been busy chasing Bambi and doing a little brush hoggin', but finally made it back in the shop for a spell. It's time to put a patch box on the rifle. I decided on a wooden box for the gun, and this will be a first for me since I have yet to do one. So it could get interesting....
I will start with the lid, so I select a scrap piece leftover from my stock blank, draw the plan and profile for the lid and saw it out.
Then square it up some:
Next I made up a couple of special tools. I got this Idea from Jack Brooks, who in turn got the idea from a former student if I remember the story correctly. The tool is made from a 60
o three cornered file. Grind one side safe, then grind a chisel point on the end of the file with the safe edge on the bottom. Take it slow and dunk it in water often to keep it cool and preserve the hardness of the file. I got one of these too hot and had to re-harden and heat treat the tip. These will be used in making the dovetails on the lid and in the rifle box.
Chisel point:
Safe side:
I made up a third 60
o chisel with all three sides ground safe, but neglected to get a picture. I used a wet grinder for that one and didn't burn the tip.
....and in case I need to grind a really large one I have Big Brother.
Now I mark lines for the dovetail portion of the lid.
Then remove the wood in front of the lead dovetail. I sawed down to my reference mark, the powered most of the wood off with a farrier's rasp. I put a razor knife blade in the saw cut to act as a fence to keep from buggering my ledge.
Now to cut a recess for the side dovetails... Since I am not the best sawyer, I stamped a line with a chisel and back cut a groove to help keep my saw blade on track. The lid tapers a bit from back to front, and the dovetails will taper slightly more than the lid.
I started to saw the edge as well, but after buggering one edge with the saw I used a chisel to cut down to my saw line. I will have to fix the boo-boo later and will take pics when I do.
Next I refined my sketch of the nose in pencil, then rasped it to shape. Then I check it for square - I often use a red or blue Sharpie to mark on the edge of my square, which in turn will transfer a mark to the high spots if you move the square laterally.
It's time to start cutting the dovetails. I first marked a 60
o reference on each end of the dovetail, then alternated between using the chisel and the file to cut the dovetails. I proceeded carefully and was pleasantly surprised on how easily they were formed. Use the sides of the file as a guide. You have the tilt the back edge of the file up to make a chisel cut. I recommend you put a razor edge on the chisel point like you would any other chisel.
I started cutting the dovetail on the other side, then decided to fix my hacked up saw job so I would have a flat edge to index my cuts with. First I cut a small flat stick of wood from the same block that the lid came from, using wood from close the the area that I will be fixing. Since I cut it with a hand saw, it was somewhat rough and thicker than what I wanted, so I put a razor in the vice and used it to scrape the stick thin and smooth. Don't forget to take the upside-down razor out of the vice.
I beveled the bottom edge to fit into the partially finished dovetail. After carefully matching the grain and curl, glue was applied the both pieces and it was clamped in a vice.
I really like this glue for maple and walnut. I don't remember where I got it and haven't seen it in any of the big box stores, so when I get low I will have to search for it online. It is very strong and won't leave a yellow line. A tight joint will disappear after staining maple or oiling walnut.
After the glue is dried and wood filed flush on the side:
Now to trim back the patch and finish the dovetail. Alternate cuts with the chisel between sides of the dovetail, and switch to filing when needed. I switched from the coarse file to the finer file, or the triple safe edge chisel as needed.
The front dovetail was cut last. It takes a sharp chisel for the end grain. In retrospect, I think may cut this one first on the next lid I make. I didn't have any issues, however I was worried the whole time I might chip out a big chunk and have another repair to make.
Dovetails complete!
Time to shape the lid up a bit. I knocked the corners off with a scrub plane:
Then started contouring and shaping with a spoke shave. The spoke shave makes very quick work of it!:
A little file work smoothed it all out. I forgot to take a picture but there will be plenty that show the lid during the fitting process that will come later.
Now I start preparing a flat spot on the butt stock for the box and lid. I use a straight edge marked up with a Sharpie to help show me the high spots:
I ran out of time for the day, so that's it for now! Thanks for looking.
Curtis