In article <[email protected]>, Tom B
<[email protected]> wrote:
> That stock, if the cherry is nicely figured and the glue-up is well
> done, is going to be awesome! Not sure game won't get spooked by the
> glow, but it'll sure look nice!
Not if he paints it a nice flat black!
:-)
Joe
running for the bunker
> boards are 3/4 stock cut to rough length. I need to know if anyone has
> a good technique for laminating stock this thick, I need to get a
> blank 3" thick. What amount of pressure is needed?
I don't think any great amount of pressure is needed - it's more
important to get all the boards as flat as possible (or cut into
exactly complimentary hills/valleys, I suppose, but that'd probably be
a lot harder than getting them all flat). Do you have a jointer? Or
some hand planes and patience? If not, you might look into renting or
borrowing time on someone else's jointer. If you bought the cherry at
a real hardwood dealer, they might do it for you for a small fee.
As far as laminating technique, you just get the boards flat, glue
them together (any kind of glue will work, TBIII or epoxy would be
best for water resistance), and clamp them. Use clamping cauls (DAGS)
if you don't have enough clamps, or if you don't have clamps that
reach deep enough.
Good luck,
Andy
Mon, Jun 4, 2007, 1:39pm (EDT-3) [email protected] doth query:
I have some great cherry stock I want to make into a rifle stock. All
boards are 3/4 stock cut to rough length. I need to know if anyone has a
good technique for laminating stock this thick, I need to get a blank 3"
thick. What amount of pressure is needed?
I've laminated 3/4" stock before, not cherry. Flat stock, planed,
glue, clamp, no prob. Pressure? Dunno. If you're not sure, do it the
usual way, try it on some scrap first.
JOAT
What is life without challenge and a constant stream of new
humiliations?
- Peter Egan
As others have said, the amount of pressure is not a critical factor.
In fact, too much might starve the joint. Even pressure and flat
surfaces are the key elements. I've built several laminated stocks
with fairly standard woodworking practices and had no problems.
1. Epoxy glue is a key. I haven't tried TB III as it wasn't around
when I did this. I used good old Acra Glass from Brownells because I
knew it from bedding actions and I trusted the stuff.
2. Watch the grain in the boards. Try to alternate up grain and down
to reduce any twisting (a twisted gun stock is not a good thing if you
want to hit what you aim at).
3. For a 4 board stack, glue 2 together as one stack, 2 together as
another. Allow to cure, re flatten if needed and glue the 2 stacks
together. I find it easier to get consistent pressure on the stack
this way.
That stock, if the cherry is nicely figured and the glue-up is well
done, is going to be awesome! Not sure game won't get spooked by the
glow, but it'll sure look nice!
If you like, take a look at:
http://web2.airmail.net/xleanone/index.html/Gun%20Stock/
This isn't a laminated stock, just the one I did last.
BTW, some of the images have NOT been re-sampled to 72 DPI, so they're
pretty big.
Regards.
Tom
On Mon, 04 Jun 2007 13:39:35 -0700, [email protected] wrote:
>I have some great cherry stock I want to make into a rifle stock. All
>boards are 3/4 stock cut to rough length. I need to know if anyone has
>a good technique for laminating stock this thick, I need to get a
>blank 3" thick. What amount of pressure is needed?
>Thanks
ROFL - could always use Minwax Dark Walnut stain on it instead!
On Wed, 06 Jun 2007 07:58:32 -0400, 10x <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>Not if he paints it a nice flat black!
>
>:-)
>
>
>Joe
>running for the bunker
"Tom B" <[email protected]> wrote
>
> If you like, take a look at:
>
> http://web2.airmail.net/xleanone/index.html/Gun%20Stock/
>
> This isn't a laminated stock, just the one I did last.
>
That is a beauty!!
Good job.