Beretta S682 Stock Checkering

dubious

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Long story but 3-4 years ago bought a wide-frame (older version) Beretta S682 Super Sport off townpost. Worse firearm deal I've ever made, barrel blueing was gone with patchy home blueing attempt, stock had a combination of oil and varnish, checkering had been sanded down, then some of the lines look like someone tried to repair it, making it even worse. My first and last sale on townpost.

I took the bluing off the barrel completely and got my local gunsmith to reblue it. I sanded the stock down and refinished in oil, The wood grain is actually quite nice.

BUT now I still have the ugly checkering that is bothering me. What are my options to get this fixed? Not looking to make money, or restore to original, I just want a nice looking and functional sporting gun for shooting clays on the weekends...
 

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It's difficult to tell just what condition the checkering is in by the pictures, it looks like it's still kinda there but worn or sanded down. You could employ someone to rechecker it or maybe get some tools and try it yourself using the remaining checkering as a guide. A bit of a disclaimer though, if you've never tried checkering it's not as easy as guys who have done it for years make it look.
Of course other options are to find new/used wood for it or love it like it is. Used wood for the wide action 682's is a bit harder to find that the narrow action 682's.
 
Pictures don’t show the checkering clearly however, if it has botched repair the likely solution is to remove all together and either leave it smooth or hsve it recheckered. Of course this will make for a slimmer wrist. If it is just “thin” with no botched over runs, you can hsve the checkering recut. Even if ther are some botched repair over runs, you may choose to just hsve it recut as best as possible. If the over runs aren’t TOO bad, this would improve it significantly but of course will still show the over runs on closer inspection. I have only checkered 3 maybe 4 guns and freshened the checkering on a couple so I have next to no experience but that limited experience suggests that recutting checkering with over runs is more difficult that starting anew or recutting good checkering so that might be reflected in tje price. Also, you may have difficulty getting a quality checkerer to do the working if it Contains over runs as people seeing it might lame them on tje guy that tried to fix it.
 
These should be better. One side has the "home fix" the other is just sanded down.
 

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I sanded the stock down and refinished in oil,
By the pics you posted, there's certainly enough checkering left to re-cut. But the time would have been before you refinished.
Most stocks I've done are checkered after they're stripped.
Might layout a pattern on a finished stock and cut the boarder and a few master, but to do a full job, I much prefer bare furniture.
 
I would sand off what's left of the checkering and start over. It would be a good time to sharpen up the side panels too, they've been rounded off by excessive sanding.
 
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