Evening,
I'm shaping the butt stock on my rifle right now and, architecturally, something isn't quite right with the comb and heel of the butt plate. The big takeaway is I didn't do a great job with the inletting angle of the butt plate; that said, I'm hoping you can help me make it look as good as it can at this point.
A few problems I now see are:
1) I didn't do a good job of filing perfectly flat the bottom of the heel, making for a slightly curved appearance that I think conflicts with the overall straight comb.
2) In filing the butt plate, I put a slight downward angle on the tail of the top flat (rear 1/2" or so) that does not match up with the overall straight profile of the comb... though I'm not sure that's the issue here.
3) (Fixable) On the molding at the front of the butt plate heel, the ring that butts up to the wood of the comb is currently taller than the one behind it. I think that might be contributing to the awkwardness of the overall profile. I can and will file that down to the height of the one behind it when I do the final clean-up/polish (or now).
The comb is ever so slightly convex when viewed in side profile.
To your eyes, what have I done incorrectly? Any recommendations on how to fix it at this point? I don't want lose much, if any, height off the comb but am thinking that maybe required if applying the fix in Point 3 above makes the whole thing flow better. I also can/will clean up the butt plate shaping; please advise if part of the fix lives in doing so.
I appreciate your time. Lots of lessons learned here...
If it helps, I've been using John Graeff's rifle (#21 in the Kindig book) as my overall guide/inspiration.
Thank you!
- Tom