repairing a sporterized SMLE rear handguard

Claven2

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I was having trouble locating a decent walnut rear handguard in these parts to replace a broken, chopped and rotted out beech handguard on an otherwise nice walnut stocked SMLE.

I had an on chopped walnut WW1 era handguard off a porter that had been varnished and had some bad cracks in it, so decided to put on my ye olde armorer's hat to give patching it a whirl.

I should have taken a before pic, but you'll have to take my word for it, the ears were chopped off and what remained had sanded round edges and a coat of poly all over it. It came off a D&T's and shot out sporter I scrapped years ago.

In this photo, I'm splicing on new walnut to work with, using titebond. The dovetails were rough cut on the bandsaw and then filed and chiseled to final shape. Same for the walnut splice stock.

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pegging the splice with bamboo pegs and titebond. It's what I had on hand, should be strong enough.

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Forgot to take a few photos, but should have mentioned, this handguard had no clip. I pulled the clip off the trashed one I had and machined new brass rivets on the lathe. I cookied a hairline crack that ran the length of the handguard, and another crack on one side of the thumb cut at the back. CA glue wicked into the cracks. Also realized I should have used a taller piece of splice for the fingers, because they contour up, so I spliced on some more walnut and pegged that too with some hardwood toothpicks. The fingers were rough cut on the bandsaw before I re-installed the spring clip, and the barrel channel was roughly hogged out on the mill with a ball cutter before being chiseled then sanded to final interior contour. Here it is oiled, but not stained:

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And finished, stained over RLO using oil based walnut leather dye. It's a great match to an old SMLE patina.

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I'd say it's usable now and not that bad a facsimile of what armorers did when new parts were scarce.
 
Decent job. A little late but I have a few , 3 are close to that color. I keep buying parts for future builds and sometimes I get more than I’ll ever need. The front hand guard is the one I have trouble finding so I normally make them. Since that picture was taken I have added the metal caps on the front of the hand guards. If I can’t find the parts i want I’ll make them. Time and effort well spent.
 

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It’s fine, just don’t mind parts with repairs if done well.

I have made the front guards as well, and repaired a fair few. The prestigious ones for sale are all wrong, more trouble to fix them than to just make one.
 
Came out really well. Nothing wrong with repairing parts. Lots of rifles sport armourer repaired stocks.
 
The only prestigious forstocks I have seen in person did not leave enough wood at the recoil draws, and fitting them caused the stocks to sit forward off the socket of the receiver.

The one I fit for a guy, I had to glue and peg new wood at the draws just to get it to fit properly. Unacceptable on a new stock inho.

The walnut replacement stocks from the 1940’s EFD manufacture that were around maybe 10 years ago, in the other hand, were a dream to fit to a rifle.
 
Those may be the stocks I have. I picked up two from different people. EFD pre 1929 pattern. Draws needed a bit of scraping and some sanding on the backs. Actually pictures of them are posted above. Exteriors where perfect. The mid outer band needed slight fitting.
The Prestigious stocks I have done where #4’s. MK1and MK2. They had enough wood in the draws and back to fit properly.
I was thinking of making a rear hand guard as I have a couple of the clips but after finding used ones I figured I had enough. The rivets I was thinking of spinning them 1/8 brass rod on my lathe down to proper size.
 
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