Poor Man's Pseudo M14 E2 Stock.

theDuck

CGN frequent flyer
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This last deer season my chu wood M14 slipped from my hands because of winter gloves, oily stock and chunky stock size. The rifle landed upside down on a rock on the scope objective bell bending the scpoe. What really pissed me off is the scope was a christmas gift last year from the young lad. To make sure it didn't happpen again I took a page from the liberals hand book and over reacted.
I always liked the look of the E2 stock so went about adding a pistol grip to the chu wood original. I looked things over and knew that the stock would need wood added to the top of the pistol grip to compensate for the loss of wood at the bottom where I had to cut out to add the new pistol grip. I was careful not to cut into the lower stock storage hole but never thought of the upper one. Note: remove items from the stock storage tubes before band sawing stock. Oops. I use a piece of walnut to add to the top and a short piece of hardwood broom handle whittled down to be glued into the storage hole. I can still put the tool in the stock.
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For the right angle for the new pistol grip I pondered the angle of the FN and the AR's. Then I figured I liked the angle of my 1911 and I and familiar with it. I laid the 1911 in the walnut, traced it out including the beaver tail safety and cut it out. The grain is in the same direction as the main stock. I went at it with a farriers rasp, a regular rasp and scraper. I figured it was easier to sculpt it off the stock. If I were to do it again I would make it about 1/2" longer. I've done muzzle loader stocks so have the tools to do stock work.
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You can see were I cut into the broom handle piece on the bottom. The angle of the bottom of the pistol grip and the added piece of the top were parrallel enough to clamp the glued pieces in a mechanics bench vise. ( Your bench vise size may vary). Make sure that the pieces don't slip when tightening said vise. Afterward I drilled a 1/4" from the bottom of the pistol grip up through the top of the stock. I put in a 1/4" x6" bolt with washers and a nut and torqued it together. I filled the bolt holes with JB Kwik weld and put the bottom piece on the bottom of the pistol grip using the JB to glue it. The finished job has a real solid feel to it.
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I filled in the areas with JB Kwik weld. Make sure you scrape off the oil and stained wood area you are adding JB weld too or it will flake off. After that I went at contouring with the rasps and files and scraper. I tried the Krylon Khaki paint but it didn't do it for me so I scrapped most it off. I actually scraped the whole stock surface of the oily surface so paint would stick. Chu wood is 'chewy' so don't expect a quality wood surface to work with. I rasped down the forend as well so it fit my hand better. I left the surface rough for grippyness. Remember, this is all because the rifle slipped out of my hand hands and wrote off a treasured scope.
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I tried this brown paint but I really want coyote brown which I can't find anywhere. The pistol grip stock has a nice feel to it. So have at it folks. If you mess it up don't worry, the Chinese are making chu wood stocks every day. Next is to take it to the range and see if it now shoots sub MOA:p.
 
Great job Duck..........Love it when pple just sit down and do stuff like this.
Looks strong enough to drive in fence posts :)
 
You know, you can wash a lot of that oily :bigHug::bigHug::bigHug::bigHug: off. Just takes some time and some TSP, or another household degreaser (I found spraynine and fantastik both to work effectively.)
 
I am not trying to rain on your parade but you have a weak spot in the stock, right where the top V-cut is. The second pic shows how thin the wood is, and right at the stress concentration. To top it off, there looks like it has a knot or some sort of discontinuity in the grain right there...

If that is a hunting rifle you might want to have someone in your party bring a spare rifle.
 
The 'knot' is the hardwood broom handle that I inserted and glued after cutting into the storage hole. Yes it is thin there but when you see how little material that is at that pont because of the storage holes in a normal stock I actually have the same or more wood and harder than before.
 
Why not put folding AR stock on instead of using old crappy wood?

Probably didnt have a foldy bit laying around.......whereas the Tactical Broom Handle (T.B.H ) is everywhere, and at the moment has sneaked past CNN. :)

Oh yeah and TBH is way cheaper than foldy bits.
 
Why not put folding AR stock on instead of using old crappy wood?

I picked up a collapsable AR type buttstock. That will go on the plastic Norc stock for CQB if I find this wooded one more generally user friendly.
I do these mods to see if they can be done, are of any real benefit and because I can. If they fail I'd let it be known since others may benefit from the fail and come up with a better idea.
Note the Tactical Broom Handle has to be concealed within the existing buttstock. That is how it sneaks past CNN:).
 
Keep in mind that the OEM "Chu" wood stock isn't that strong in the first place..........I have seen the Chu wood stock fail/crack/break just behind the trigger assembly..............now that you have made one, I would suggest using a better quality wood stock and do the E2 Mod to it.......... ;)
 
Good on ya for that bit of modding! It might not be esthetically pleasing to some but as long as it works for you, that is all that matters.
Personally, I found the "Chu" stock very awkward, so I ditched it for a USGI.
 
I have the walnut, tools and the ability to make a one piece E2 style stock but lack the ambition. Doing the inletting is the part I don't like. A stock duplicator would be good to do the blank from the back of the trigger guard and rear of the action and freestyle the back part. I don't know of anyone with a duplicator.
If this stock gives out I put the action into the USGI walnut stock I have and the chu wood into the wood stove :).
 
LAW483 Makes very nice E2 Stocks but the pricks won't sell outside the states. Both wood and synthetic.

h ttp://www.law483.com/law483_stock_gallery.html
 
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