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Or how about this on CHE ( Ber) 136,503? Not your standard C stock checkering and comb nose but it numbers and letters. Except for the checkered cheeks, its correct for a D but not a C.
And the drop points are more rhomboidal than oblate. Guess I'd say more diamond than rounded. |
My layman's ignorance may show with this comment, but (regarding the pictures on page 1 of this post) isn't it unusual for un-cut barrels to not touch each other at the muzzle ?
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From what I can see, they're touching. That yellow stuff is preventing us from seeing the full thickness of the barrel walls as they touch.
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Agreed - I should have put my glasses on & looked more carefully.
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John thanks for asking the question. I thought the same thing you did and I had my glasses on.
Best, Mike |
Some of us were "trained observers" in our professional life.
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:rolleyes: ;)
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Cutting Drop Points
I have a little gouge the was my great grandfather's. He was a very skilled cabinet and furniture maker (1830 -1896). A little gouge like that would fit the curves of C and D drop points almost perfectly.
I think the drop points were made with 4 cuts of a gouge on each side. The groove and point of the comb were also hand cut and finished to provide thumb clearance after setting the stock dimensions. They are not precision machine cuts like the inletting. Best, Austin |
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Best, Mike |
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