Observations:
No 'finger nails' in the grain anywhere: not beech.
Chequering: Walnut, very rare to have chequered beech.
Colour / grain: Leaning more to a low grade walnut as opposed to beech.
Documentation:
pdf.textfiles.com/manuals/FIREARMS/cz550.pdf
Page 23: CZ 550 Standard: Walnut: straight from the manufacturers literature.
Candocad.
Your finger-nails are not an indicator of species; rather that the piece of lumber was quarter sawn. You see this in Beech, Birch, Maple, Oak etc. see oak below: That being said, the stock in question is European Beech, as is they one you posted.
CZ checkers all their beech stocks...not sure I'd call that rare, since we are talking about CZ rifles.
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Observations:
No 'finger nails' in the grain anywhere: not beech.
Chequering: Walnut, very rare to have chequered beech.
Colour / grain: Leaning more to a low grade walnut as opposed to beech.
Documentation:
pdf.textfiles.com/manuals/FIREARMS/cz550.pdf
Page 23: CZ 550 Standard: Walnut: straight from the manufacturers literature.
Candocad.
I had a quick check on the CZ range, and the only beech stock that I could find that had something like chequering was a CZ 457 Jaguar. Looks like lazer rather than chequering. Most if not all their walnut stocks are checkered.
The other beech wood stocked rifles (CZ 457 Scout / CZ 457 Training Rifle / CZ 512 Semi Auto) do not have any chequering on them. (https://cz-usa.com/product-category/rifles/)
From experience, beech can be quite variable when trying to chequer, even when compared to a cheap piece of walnut. Simply put it can be really hard to get a good finish on some beech, that and it's reputation of being inferior to walnut means few beechwood stocks get chequering.
Candocad.
Beech "fingernails" look nothing like those of "Birch, Maple, Oak etc." Once you know what it looks like, you can't confuse it with anything else. Beech has a unique ugliness all its own.




























