Sometimes you just don't have a choice. The gun is a Westley Richards GN-series, 12 gauge and the problem is that the forend tip somehow went missing in action. The shank of the screw that held it on was still in the pushrod tube portion of the forend iron. So, after removing the remains of the screw (it's a 7BA, for those of you who are curious) and cleaning up the original inletting, the real fun begins. Normally, one inlets the wood to accept the metal part, but here it's just the opposite, meaning that I've got to make a part to fit the original inletting and external contours. I assure you that smoking steel and scraping wood is a WHOLE lot easier than shaping steel to fit the wood. The fact that the forend tip is a total bastard to hold while shaping doesn't make the job go any faster either. I did as much as I could while the part was still attached to the bar of 1020 from which it came but eventually, it had to be cut free in order to finish shaping it.
The forend, disassembled
Little by little, the part is sunk into the existing inletting
Then it's cut free to shape the external contours
The shaping is complete
One last check of the fit and then it's prepped for finishing. I had a few other small parts to color case harden, so this went in with those.
The finished part
good job
ReplyDeleteThanks J.
DeleteBass-ackwards indeed. You have to wonder about the designer who sat at his desk sketching out the components for the forend and who said to himself - "oh yes, this is going to be a fine looking, easily manufactured forend....."
ReplyDeleteI don't think that you quite "get it".
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