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    Contributing Member mrclark303's Avatar
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    Hiding repaired cracks in stocks

    Morning all, I had to repair a badly damaged walnut stock a few weeks ago, basically a previous poor repair with ebony pegs added.

    This was further compromised by Parcel Force who caused further damage during their laughable service....

    Looked like they had used it to hammer home fence posts....

    Anyway, took it all apart and steadily rebuilt it with wood epoxy resin glue and walnut side grain plugs....

    Happy with a strong repair, however I have a few ribbons of epoxy glue showing where previous wood loss made a seamless repair impossible, has anyone a good way of making them less obvious?
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    Contributing Member Flying10uk's Avatar
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    Fiebing's leather dye, the alcohol version, not the water based version, works very well as a wood dye if you want a wood dye. They do it in a good range of colours.

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    Contributing Member usabaker's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by bombdoc View Post
    have always dyed any glue used for stock repair black.. I usually used Acraglas gel as it is designed for gun work and is extremely stable. Grain is black, not brown..
    Quote Originally Posted by Flying10uk View Post
    Fiebing's leather dye, the alcohol version, not the water based version, works very well as a wood dye if you want a wood dye.
    bombdoc and Flying10uk both are spot on, you can use the black leather dye or Brownell's black dye thinned with spirts (to shades of black) with a fine paintbrush to follow the grain across the break, joining them back up. This will blend and will keep the eye from focusing on the break.
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    Advisory Panel browningautorifle's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by mrclark303 View Post
    a few ribbons of epoxy glue showing
    You DO mean the epoxy? It's like a two tube glue?
    Regards, Jim

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    Contributing Member mrclark303's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by browningautorifleicon View Post
    You DO mean the epoxy? It's like a two tube glue?
    That's the one Jim, a special two pack that uses wood resins in its makeup...

    ---------- Post added at 11:31 PM ---------- Previous post was at 11:30 PM ----------

    Thanks for the advice guys....

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    Legacy Member bombdoc's Avatar
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    I have always dyed any glue used for stock repair black.. I usually used Acraglas gel as it is designed for gun work and is extremely stable. Grain is black, not brown..

    If you have already glued the stock then to some extent the horse has already bolted..!I tend to try and pack any voids with slivers of wood set in resin. My best advice now is to use a scalpel to cut fine lines into the glue and then fill with black dyed adhesive such as Acraglas (which comes with dye packs).. once you have taken the glue lines back to the surface, I would then fill and wax the wood to dull down the joins.
    Last edited by bombdoc; 08-03-2020 at 05:32 PM.

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    Contributing Member mrclark303's Avatar
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    Attachment 110365Attachment 110366Attachment 110367Attachment 110368

    Here's the repair guys, as can be seen, quite the mission.
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    Contributing Member usabaker's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by mrclark303 View Post
    Here's the repair guys, as can be seen, quite the mission.
    Yup, those are some repairs! big challenge in hiding those. The right side looks to be off another rifle? Are these stocks hard to come by?
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    Contributing Member mrclark303's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by usabaker View Post
    Yup, those are some repairs! big challenge in hiding those. The right side looks to be off another rifle? Are these stocks hard to come by?
    The rifles a rare 1950 dated BSA Airsporter Mk1 Air gun. The stock was made in three parts. Post war austerity meant walnut was hard to come by, so they could cut the wood from small blanks and glue on the sides, quite often these side pieces are beech.

    Original stocks rarely come up and frequently require major surgery to repair!

    I'm mid way through a lockdown project to rebuild two of these beutifully engineed and very attractive rifles to best possible condition.

    The work continues.....
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    Quote Originally Posted by mrclark303 View Post
    The rifles a rare 1950 dated BSA Airsporter Mk1 Air gun. The stock was made in three parts. Post war austerity meant walnut was hard to come by, so they could cut the wood from small blanks and glue on the sides, quite often these side pieces are beech. Original stocks rarely come up and frequently require major surgery to repair!
    Thank you for the info and insight! What a fantastic project. I need to stop asking questions, now I have yet another rifle on my list to look for.
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