Thanks guys! Hank, always good to hear from you. If I still have the rifle in my possession next spring I will certainly bring it with me to Bowling Green. At the rate I go it may not even be finished by then!
Now I am going to spend some time refining the stock shape. First I will shape the nose area closer to it's final shape. I sketched on the cut lines, then cut it down with my new, $1 #49 Nicholson rasp. It's not nice to brag, but sometimes you gotta boast. Earlier this week I picked up two nearly pristine #49 rasps at an antique shop for a buck apiece! Here are a couple of pics:
Guidelines are great but sooner or later you have to just use your eyeballs to refine a shape. Using a raking light source has been mentioned on this forum many a times, but it cannot be overstated. If you move the light source the imperfections will show in the shadows, allowing you to rectify the situation.
My lock panels were previously just roughed in, now that the sideplate is installed I can refine them a bit. I use a rasp for at least 90% of the lock panel shaping, then clean up with a half round file and scrapers. To quote Bob Lienemann from an article he wrote for the American Tradition, ".... Lock panels are close around the lock, and there is no extra wood anywhere."
This is as far as I will go on the front of the panels for now. Before I can finish shaping the bottom of the panels I need to install my trigger and at least locate the trigger guard. Naturally, before I install the trigger I will have to make both it and a trigger plate.
Here I am cutting out a trigger blank and then cold forging the trigger shoe. There is an excellent tutorial for forging triggers by Eric von Aschwege in the tutorial section for those who have never made one.
Now to start cutting it to shape a bit, here is my sketch up:
That's it for now, the dinner bell rang and I ran out of time. I should be back in the shop later this week and will continue to persevere.....
Curtis