Remington switched to "hardwood " mahogany from walnut in the early 80's on all their wingmasters, 760 etc. I have both here.
Remington switched to "hardwood " mahogany from walnut in the early 80's on all their wingmasters, 760 etc. I have both here.
Here are the pictures of the two stocks I mentioned
The rifles are pictured against different backgrounds and at different angles which does impact color balance of each photograph, but I was told both stocks are quite alike in tint and pattern which would suggest they are made from the same wood...
I'm no expert but to me they are full figured walnut. Some of my skeet and trap guns have the same high grade walnut both from remington and browning. Forget pics win/64 I am not digging them out.
Look at the grain how it runs in the hardwood mah pics I posted and it is clearly different.
Here is an example of a high figured walnut remington 1100 stock which to me is similiar to yours
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It's to bad about the 1100 even nice wood won't make it into a Gun that works well.
WW What is it called when you see different patterns in Walnut? Is it flame? I have a Walnut stocked gun. That if you move it back and forth in different directions, the grain seems to change.
Depends on the pattern. They are universally referred to as "figure" or "curl", and are a form of "chatoyance" but patterns vary. Google image: tiger, fiddleback, quilt, blister, beeswing, flame, mottle.
WW
For sure. I remember remington calling theirs sun grain .
Isn't mahogany too soft for a gun stock?
Not at all, but some types of "hardwood" mahogany can actually be heavier than walnut, which has a good balance of weight, durability and strength,and looks nice as well.
Remington switched to "hardwood " mahogany from walnut in the early 80's on all their wingmasters, 760 etc. I have both here.
We "wood" lovers all like nicely figured wood. While many woods have been used, a nice piece of walnut is hard to beat. Here's my favorite walnut stock, it's on a 700 Classic in 8x57. Eagleye.
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I have a friend who took a tour of the Ruger factory. During the tour it was explained to them, that really nicely figured wood stocked rifles were set aside for #1. VIPs, and #2. Ruger's own factory personnel. (for them, a discount in MSRP)Hard to believe that is a factory stock, isn't it? My thought was: how come this piece of wood wasn't set aside for the custom shop? Lucky me! Eagleye.
Hard to believe that is a factory stock, isn't it? My thought was: how come this piece of wood wasn't set aside for the custom shop? Lucky me! Eagleye.



























