Recently acquired a CVA kit, and have been having fun with it.
This kit is from 1979, and remarkably, most all the parts-pieces are there. Couple small items, but easy to take care of. Even came with TWO barrels, a .50 and a.54. More on those in a bit. For a 40-year old kit, it's OK.
I have NO idea what kind of wood this is on the Hawken stock. I'll try to add a picture. The wood does NOT cut well, it like to splinter or split. Using a file or scraper, saw, sandpaper it does fine, but if a chisel is within sight, the wood will start to split out. So far, no mishaps though. So one of the big questions is what wood did CVA chose to pre-shape/inlet on the Hawken?
So I started to finish the inletting on the .54 barrel. Made in Spain, it had been "sanded" with about 40 grit stuff. Some 180 and 220, it started looking good, and I finished up with 320. Did a LOT of scraping on the barrel channel, and finally got the barrel inletted well. Nose cap - well, almost done with that.
So, I sez, let us see how it looks with the .50 barrel! Much to my surprise, it fit like a small hand in Daddy's glove! Turns out that the .54 barrel is 1.00" across the flats, while the .50 barrel is only 0.9375, or 15/16" !!!
There is also only ONE barrel lug, and of course, only one key. That's not a big deal, I can always make a dovetail barrel lug. And with only one stock, you only need one key.
I'm going to progress on this "Hawken", maybe embellish a bit with some silver wire or something. But, I AM going to be in the market for a Hawken stock, only this one with a 15/16" barrel channel.
I would really appreciate it if one of you can identify the wood. Fairly soft, tan with dark little dashes through it, almost like Morse code.
Appreciate the help!
virtual toss