What exactly is the problem with the rear of the forend? BTW it looks like a sound proposition for a restoration, not too many bits and bobs to scratch together, and it should be a little ripper.
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What exactly is the problem with the rear of the forend? BTW it looks like a sound proposition for a restoration, not too many bits and bobs to scratch together, and it should be a little ripper.
How'd I miss that!? I saw this repair(the one on your rifle) done on a L39 recently, it was unlike yours double dovetailed(ie. front and back, because unlike yours this damage must have ended before the back of the forend ) and pegged with fine dowels. It was beautifully done. I suppose with this one you only dovetail the front, cut the crack along the grain so that it's parallel with the top of the forend, fit an oversized patch in similar timber with the correct grain orientation, glue and clamp, allow to dry, rough shape, peg, make off.
The patch would only be as big as essential, but would be similar to this, but on one side of the other end.
Ah Me2 ........... The trouble was that the after the war, the machines were working - but slowly. They were producing things, but not producing the right things. The place was an industrial nightmare. Like I said, it would make a good readable history just so long as it included the warts an' all.
Hope I'm not going too far astray here but didnt (the real) Triumph Motorcycles have it's share of labour unrest especially in the last few months of it's existence? What was the problem in England back then??? Fazakerly could probably have survived at least a while longer but for the workers upsetting production or was management equally to blame?
There's always two sides Me2 but I remember being in Australia when the wharfies refused to load the transport ships because they didn't agree with whatever it was they didn't agree with that particular day. One minister described it like '..... the managers must manage and the workers must work'. Well, typically Australian and to the point.
Yep, Triumph and Norton both........................
The problem is the same thing we're experiencing in the USA now. It's called labor union dispute. It's sinking or has sunk most of the big industrial production of the USA just like it did in England and other places in the so-called free Western world. Did you ever notice the car companies here in the USA that are doing the best under the current economic conditions? It's Toyota and BMW. They have plants in the non-union southern states. BMW is just up the road in Spartanburg, SC.
Hey Brian, I have seen Boeing is trying to open a plant in SC? I probably do not have to relate the "rest" of the story to you. What a shame! I know what you mean.