I acquired two building books (already mentioned), three reference books, watched the VHS of Hershel House (borrowed), read everything possible to find online and this site and the archives of the original ALR, mounted 2 full-scale posters from TOW on the shop walls, AND had a gun-maker guru only an hour away. I made half a dozen trips to see him and I made a "try fit" stock mockup for pull and cast.
First rifle still sucks a bit. But that's to be expected. I finished it in time to hunt, then pared down the wood further, refinished some of the metal, then refinished and re-assembled and haven't yet finished fixin' up all the things that could be fixed on it. But it hunts and impresses the non-builders and non-shooters.
The best advise ever was when John, the guru said,
"Don't waste time fixin' up that one. GO ON and make another, make it better."
Which I am presently doing and hope it comes out more to my liking. NOW I have an in-house "pattern" to go by.
ALSO, I've been to a few rifle shows now and seen/handled a bunch of guns since I completed mine. This is necessary to get the best overall feel for it all. I'm not so sure that seeing/handling would have meant as much to me before I had a fixed point of reference in my own gun.
We shall soon see if #2 is better. I'm hacking a channel in the Ash presently. This is a break. oh for the love of Ash! I always knew I wanted a "big" bore and a smaller one. Then I thought what the hey, have three and cover all the bases. Later I may want a true big bore for Moose and Grizz. But I can stop any time...
THERE simply is no substitute for EYES of experienced makers looking at your work WHILE you progress and more importantly BEFORE you make booboos or stylistic decisions that may be difficult to fix. With this ALR site, you can do that from anywhere with web access. TAKE ADVANTAGE of it, especially if you have no local guidance or if he/she doesn't understand the style you want to emulate.
So maybe go ahead and "loosely plan" for a second one, that way you can "cost average" your tools and reference materials and trips over two guns, not just one.
also, you're not that old. John was 75 when I met him. He's pushing 80 or better now.