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The stock pictured is definitely "Birch". LB used walnut, yellow birch (with and without dye) and maple. I've never seen LB produced "beech" however lots of Brit "Beech" on FTR LB's. Ron (Canada
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03-29-2015 03:23 PM
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Glad you said that too RGG. I've seen a lot of the light woods on the No5's, 4's and L1A1's etc etc and while I'm no expert by any stretch of the imagination, that photo just looked like birch to me, albeit a little yellow - which I puit down to age and treatment. I wish I could find the words that our woodworking instructors (Mr Duffield and Reilly) usaed to use to illustrate each.......
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Thank you all for your input. I was skeptical enough so, I asked. Beautiful wood for sure, Perhaps CODFan would like to sell me his butt?? ;-)
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Perhaps a few visual pictures from the Woodworkers Association might help unscramble the wood identification conundrums:
Walnut: http://www.woodworking.org/WC/Woods/161.html
Birch: http://www.woodworking.org/WC/Woods/030.html
Beech: http://www.woodworking.org/WC/Woods/020.html
Maple: http://www.woodworking.org/WC/Woods/125.html
Remember, what the wood looks like in real life depends very much on how it's cut relative to the grain, and how it's been stained.
Hope this helps.
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You're right of course SS. I was thinking of a reply but your last sentence really does sum it up. A GOOD example of this was a friend wanted to replace some oak flooring. Took some large sections to the carpenters shop nearby to have it cut into planks and then into the flooring sections. When it came back it didn't even remotely match what he'd laid earlier. Because they'd sawn and planed the wood from the same original trunk section but using a different 'cut'.......
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You're right of course SS. I was thinking of a reply but your last sentence really does sum it up. A GOOD example of this was a friend wanted to replace some oak flooring. Took some large sections to the carpenters shop nearby to have it cut into planks and then into the flooring sections. When it came back it didn't even remotely match what he'd laid earlier. Because they'd sawn and planed the wood from the same original trunk section but using a different 'cut'.......
And multiply that consternation with the different types of woods within a species -- white or red birch? white or red oak or English brown oak? or African or Honduran Mahogany (Philippine mahogany is not a real mahogany), etc. -- and then the woodworker will typically quarter-saw a plank leaving a tight grain while the carpenter will live-saw a plank getting the widest board possible, with two totally different appearances. No wonder the amateur woodworker can get confused.
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I always get it wrong in identifying wood until I bought a book called, "What Wood is it." It has actual samples of the wood bound in the book.
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Last edited by Surpmil; 04-19-2015 at 03:46 PM.
“There are invisible rulers who control the destinies of millions. It is not generally realized to what extent the words and actions of our most influential public men are dictated by shrewd persons operating behind the scenes.”
Edward Bernays, 1928
Much changes, much remains the same. 
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What I Thought Was Beech
When CODfan posted a pic of his buttstock, I saw it was a perfect match for the forestock and handguards I had. I private messaged him and he agreed to sell the buttstock to me. Thank you CODfan, I am extremely happy with the complete set of LB marked wood now. I don't have anything to put in it but who knows what the future holds.
The complete stock and shots of the wood that confused my amateur wood eyes. A nicely done patch as well, that I'm sure Peter will approve of.
Attachment 62362Attachment 62359Attachment 62360Attachment 62361
Attachment 62364Attachment 62363
Last edited by SpikeDD; 04-29-2015 at 07:58 PM.
David
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Thank You to CODFan For This Useful Post: