As the title says.
I've bought a couple of unfinished gunstocks and want to do checkering.
Any info I should know about?
Any good books and/or sights that would be good to have.
Tools?
Thanks for any help!
Gunsmithing Simplified by Macfarland or Gunsmithing by Roy F. Dunlap goes into some easily understood detail
The first thing you need to have, even before you purchase checkerking tools, is a stock maker's cradle. It's adjustable for all sorts of angles that just aren't doable by the human body with a fixed vice or Tipton gun vice, typically used for cleaning or mounting scopes.
Checkering tools are available from Amazon and Ebay as well as Brownelle's
One thing you need to do, before you even make your first groove, the stock should be finished first, then checkered and have the finish touched up after, if needed.
Lots of light, without shadows is always a good thing.
Practice on a piece of scrap wood or stock first. Junker stocks can be anything from old cut down milsur stocks to broken commercial stocks.
I found that the best wood to practice on was a 2 inch piece of ROUND FIR DOWEL, which is cheap and most shops that sell it, have it in half lengths.
Anyone can checker a flat surface with relative ease.
Cutting the grooves on a rounded surface, half way around takes a lot of patience and at least a mildly developed skill set.
There used to be a lady living in Vernon, now deceased, that did some incredible checkering designs. She was a real artist.
Everyone thought it was her husband that did the work. He did do the simple stuff very well but all of the intricate stuff with 32 lines per inch or more wasl all hers.