I am in the process of building a precarved 45 caliber 7/8 barreled Vincent Ohio half-stock rifle. I had the barrel, tang, lockplate and trigger plate inletted and was ready to drill the tang bolt and barrel pin. The inletting was tight, however, there was a small gap near the nosecap area probably caused a twist in the stock. To solve this problem, I placed the barrel channel area in a bucket of water up to the breach area for about 2 hours and then returned the barrel to the the stock. The stock was clamped at the tang, at the lug pin area and at the nosecap area. Everything looked nice and tight. After about 4 days, I looked at the gun and to my horror, there were major gaps on both sides of the barrel and even on the front portion of the tang area where it got wet. Right now the barrel is extremely loose and there is a 1/8 inch gap along the barrel on one side and 1/16 inch gap on the other side. Normally, I would think that wood would expand when wet and not shrink causing these major gaps. To fix this problem, I was thinking of completing the process over and this time use hot water and clamp the barrel to the stock on the same areas and also on the sides and see what happens. I could also bed the barrel, but I am concerned that this would be very visible because the wood on Vincent rifles is very thin and feathered along the barrel. Any ideas?