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Thread: Repairing a Shortened Stock Heel?

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  1. #1
    Legacy Member Stretch32's Avatar
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    Repairing a Shortened Stock Heel?

    I have a friend who has an 1899 (or possibly 1898) Kragicon carbine stock. For the most part it's in overall good condition however, at some point, somebody sawed off about 2 inches or so from the heel of the stock. This obviously prevents the butt plate from mounting correctly but also ruins a rare and expensive carbine stock.

    I've repaired stocks before but have only delt with attaching new fore ends to return sporter stocks back to correct rifle length. I've never really given much thought or attempted to repair a shortened heel.

    Besides the obvious issue of blending a seam (probably impossible actually) is there any way to actually splice on a new heel from a donor stock? I guess I'd pin and Acra-glass the new heel to the butt stock so it's solid but I'm not sure how to go about cutting the pieces so they'd line up correctly. I guess I'm not sure how I'd measure the pieces / cuts to butt together with minimal sanding and filling (maybe some common datum between the 2 stocks?).

    Does anybody have any suggestions on how I might do this? Has anybody ever actually done this repair themselves?

    Stretch
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  3. #2
    Legacy Member WarPig1976's Avatar
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    Yes, It can be done. PM sent.

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  5. #3
    Advisory Panel browningautorifle's Avatar
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    Pics would be nice too, it'll be helpful for the next guy. Besides, we'd love to see it.
    Regards, Jim

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    I have repaired about a zillion butts in my time but there is no such thing as an invisible repair, believe me. A picture would help me decide what I would do but what you do is a matter for you. Regards

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    Advisory Panel browningautorifle's Avatar
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    As stated, I've seen them also...good jobs of blending and then the attraction is the fact it's been restored.
    Regards, Jim

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    Legacy Member Stretch32's Avatar
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    After some research, I feel this a worthwhile project so I'm going to either do it myself or have WarPig give it a go. I aree with browningautorifleicon on the attraction of a restored and now functional / usable stock even if the seam isn't invisible. In the end, it's a real Kragicon carbine stock that has been made serviceable again. Now if I can just find an 1899 Krag carbine barreled receiver........ :-)

    This may go on the back burner until April since I'm moving in a few weeks and have run out of time to take on new projects.

    I'll try and post pics of the stock in question this weekend if I make it to my friend's house.

    Stretch

  9. #7
    Advisory Panel browningautorifle's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Stretch32 View Post
    Now if I can just find an 1899 Kragicon carbine barreled receiver........ :-)
    Good luck on that one, this could turn out to be a labor of insanity...but eventually it will be complete.
    Regards, Jim

  10. #8
    Legacy Member Stretch32's Avatar
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    I doubt I'd find an 1899 barreled receiver for anything in a "reasonable" price range in all honesty. I'd settle for a rifle receiver with a real carbine barrel if I could find something like that. The issue with a cut down rifle barrel is 1. the taper isn't the same as a real carbine and 2. the front sight almost always seems to get replaced with a 1903 front sight vice actually attaching the original Kragicon sight base.

    I really enjoy shooting my 92/96 Krag rifle and it's probably my most accurate bolt rifle so having a carbine would be nice. I'm not willing to spend $2000+ for a good shooter so a nice sporter or clone that looks correct would fill the bill for me.

    Stretch

  11. #9
    Advisory Panel browningautorifle's Avatar
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    You might find the parts alone, receiver, barrel...sights. Sounds expensive to me though.
    Regards, Jim

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