My fingers got too busy typing before I saw the end of the video, sorry for “jumping the gun”. The finished work was excellent. I always enjoy seeing your videos.
Wow! I didn't think that could be repaired to the point of not being able to see that it had been repaired but you sure pulled it off. Mad skills, I'm beyond impressed.
I must say, you have learned incredible patience., well done! I do have one question though, how does a perfectionist meaning me learn to live with imperfections?
Thank you for taking the time to comment Jim. Well...im not sure I can speak for every personality...but for me (a fellow traveler) every day and with every job, I do the best work that my skills and my training allows. I have come to accept that "my best" is the best that I know how, but that "the best" is a place I still need to arrive at (I call it true north). For me perfection is always a future place, and the journey (one foot placed ahead of the other) combined with a willingness to go on that journey with honesty, hard work, perseverance and a dose of humility, will find every next attempt better or improved from the last. Malcolm Gladwell in his book Outliers: The Story of Success, following an analysis of several different researchers, published this concept that it takes 10,000 hours of practice to accomplish "true expertise". Every one of those hours is that one foot placed ahead of the other. However...and always...the artist, the craftsman, "the perfectionist" needs to accept and learn to be comfortable with the state of perfection in which they currently exist...knowing thier very next attempt will build on the former. Honor your mistakes as you learn from them...and then take one more step. I talk about this very concept in many of my videos. Best on your journey Jim.
glued back together my stock i dropped and cracked off the right side of the rail all the way to the rear. Fell apart in 3 chunks soit was super easy to put back together with glue. Next ill bed the stock back into the stock and the refinish the stock , ill remove the old stain and old reshape the parts that are popping out. Use some epoxy to strengthen the cracks with holes and metal pins. Thats what i was missing, a clamp . Once its done it will look like it was a refinished stock. I wanted a rifle to work on anyways so this is all fun for me. I love working on guns of all sorts.
@@SixRoundsStudio that makes things even better when you love what you do I'm a fabicator and I also love what I can build or fix with my hands plus farm and yes I also wish more of the younger generation would also get into craftmanship and want to learn I'm thankful my kids don't really like playing video games or seating in front of the TV for hours on end they want to learn so I do everything I can to help and teach them and there friends to caus they need that especially in this day and age but thank u again hope you have a great and safe Christmas sir
Great job Bill! Love the channel. I have a stock to repair on my buddies grandpa’s rifle. I may need to stop in to the shop and bend your ear. -Aaron Benware(Ruger)
Bill, I recently found and subscribed to your TH-cam channel and am really enjoying your videos! Please keep them coming. I also enjoy restoring the classics, but am nowhere near your level of craftsmanship, which is outstanding! Question: What is the brand of artists color that you used to match the color/ stain of the Weatherby stock? I've not used these before and would appreciate any guidance you can offer? Many thanks! JB
Hi Jeff. Thank you! If you are referring to the artist oils that I mix in with the finish, I am using Windsor and Newton. I’m sure any high quality artist oil would work.
How did you get starting working on guns? Did you go to school or do an apprenticeship? I’m looking at trying to take myself to the next level! I found your videos while waiting for the glue to dry on my project!
Thanks for the question. We work by the hour so the cost would always depend on the amount of work required to do the repair. We never know what to expect until it reveals itself. For instance having to pick all of the crystalized glue out of the break from a previous repair was unexpected and took time to accomplish.
@@SixRoundsStudio I just talked to the man who did the repair. He glued it with guitar glue, with no reinforcement. I was skeptical cause I asked about reinforcement , he said: "that's what amateurs use". Anyway, that's what he said. BTW, it's a 12 g the break is perpendicular to the stock.
I dont. I have been mentoring several younger guys who are interested in the art and they are each working on one of their own firearms as I coach them. Thats about as "school" as it gets right now. Thanks for showing interest.
@@SixRoundsStudio I did some gunsmithing more armory work but I can build many parts. Awaiting my gunsmith license but in Trinidad it takes forever. Never got the opportunity to do stock making...perhaps if time permits our interaction I can take a trip and you can show me somethings.
Awesome job! But unfortunately, a lot of the secret technique seems to be, put 200,000 man-hours into it. It seems like this couldn't possibly be an economical alternative unless the cost of a replacement stock is several thousand dollars!
There are lots of reasons owners choose to repair or restore and not to replace. Cost is a very practical approach (sometimes replacements are not available or themselves very expensive). Other times emotions make the decisions (gun belonged to a friend or family member). And in the case of an antique or classic...its only original once so many owners want to maintain as much original as possible. Its interesting that you think the cost for repair is so high as to make it unreasonable an approach. Thank you for your observation and comment.
@@SixRoundsStudio Sorry, not very specific. What is your recipe for the Secret Sauce Red #2 and #3 that you used for color matching. It matched so well
@@drd1924 Well....Its a secret ;) But I will tell you it involves red artist oils and mixing them into the finish until the color matches. More art and experience than science.
@@SixRoundsStudio Ahhh... the old ancient indian artist oil trick. Awesome thank you! I was wondering if it was a special blend of wood stain, diesel and used motor oil or something
More restoration videos: th-cam.com/play/PL9qDCV5FBukTcDpJ9ZeBJgDqNABA9hlcs.html
My fingers got too busy typing before I saw the end of the video, sorry for “jumping the gun”. The finished work was excellent. I always enjoy seeing your videos.
@@UtSlpilot Thank you. Love the work
Finally, a TH-cam Gunsmith who knows what he is doing !
Thanks for an excellent video - you made that broken Weatherby look like new!
Thank you Paul
Very fine work. The owner must be pleased!
He was. Appreciate you watching and commenting.
Probably one of the better gun stock repair videos I've seen. Good call on using that blind screw.
Wow! Thank you!
This is the best repair ive ever seen. Very good work.
Thank you very much!! Really appreciate you watching and taking the time to comment.
You sir,set a very high standard,possibly only a small few can achieve.
Well thank you very much!
Who are the 4 Mental Midgets who gave this video a thumb down? Wow! SixRounds Studio, that was Phenomenal!!
WOW GREAT JOB, THANKS FOR THE INFORMATIVE VIDEO.😯😁🤗👍
Thanks you!!
Phenomenal. You did a great job to totally camouflage the break. Beautiful.
Thank you Daniel. These are always challenging repairs.
nice work now i want to learn how to fix guns now
There is plenty of ways to learn. Schools, mentorships, DIY . Just need to jump in. Thanks for commenting.
Wow
That was some incredible work, well done!
Thank you!!
Great video, enjoyed every minute! You did a wonderful job on that stock.
Thank you Mark!
Wow! I didn't think that could be repaired to the point of not being able to see that it had been repaired but you sure pulled it off. Mad skills, I'm beyond impressed.
The checkering hides most of the repair. Thank you again!
I say he performed a miracle cuz I thought he was gonna have to scrap that stock
I must say, you have learned incredible patience., well done! I do have one question though, how does a perfectionist meaning me learn to live with imperfections?
Thank you for taking the time to comment Jim. Well...im not sure I can speak for every personality...but for me (a fellow traveler) every day and with every job, I do the best work that my skills and my training allows. I have come to accept that "my best" is the best that I know how, but that "the best" is a place I still need to arrive at (I call it true north). For me perfection is always a future place, and the journey (one foot placed ahead of the other) combined with a willingness to go on that journey with honesty, hard work, perseverance and a dose of humility, will find every next attempt better or improved from the last. Malcolm Gladwell in his book Outliers: The Story of Success, following an analysis of several different researchers, published this concept that it takes 10,000 hours of practice to accomplish "true expertise". Every one of those hours is that one foot placed ahead of the other. However...and always...the artist, the craftsman, "the perfectionist" needs to accept and learn to be comfortable with the state of perfection in which they currently exist...knowing thier very next attempt will build on the former. Honor your mistakes as you learn from them...and then take one more step. I talk about this very concept in many of my videos. Best on your journey Jim.
glued back together my stock i dropped and cracked off the right side of the rail all the way to the rear. Fell apart in 3 chunks soit was super easy to put back together with glue. Next ill bed the stock back into the stock and the refinish the stock , ill remove the old stain and old reshape the parts that are popping out. Use some epoxy to strengthen the cracks with holes and metal pins. Thats what i was missing, a clamp . Once its done it will look like it was a refinished stock. I wanted a rifle to work on anyways so this is all fun for me. I love working on guns of all sorts.
Nice! Yes this can all be really fun. Thanks for taking some time to comment!
Stunning work!
Thank you very much!
Wood is good.
The checkered area looks super.
Thank you. I was pleased it came out well. It also helped to hide the repair. Thank you for watching and commenting
Beautiful work
Thank you
Very good video, thanks.
Thank you Howard!
Belo trabalho
Exemplary workmanship. Bravos!
Thank You
Great repair!!!! I'm going to try it. Been using the colored epoxy for years, never thought of using the paint to hide it. Great idea 💡 thanks
Your welcome! Hope you subscribe.
I will do that.
excellent video and job
Thank you very much!
EXCELLENT JOB
Thank you Bear!
That is remarkable you do very beautiful work sir thank you for sharing this
You are very welcome. I love the work and only wish more younger folks would find value in craft and craftsmanship.
@@SixRoundsStudio that makes things even better when you love what you do I'm a fabicator and I also love what I can build or fix with my hands plus farm and yes I also wish more of the younger generation would also get into craftmanship and want to learn I'm thankful my kids don't really like playing video games or seating in front of the TV for hours on end they want to learn so I do everything I can to help and teach them and there friends to caus they need that especially in this day and age but thank u again hope you have a great and safe Christmas sir
@@hawkeye7834 You as well.
Great Work!!
Thank you! It was an interesting problem to solve. Thank you for watching and taking the time to comment.
great job. Exactly what I was looking for! Thank you!
Any way that I can help 🙂
Well done, and very thorough.
Thank you. Appreciate the comment!
Very nice job.
Thank you
That was a very creative way of tackling several complex issues.
You're a professional
Great job Bill! Love the channel. I have a stock to repair on my buddies grandpa’s rifle. I may need to stop in to the shop and bend your ear.
-Aaron Benware(Ruger)
Not a problem... glad you like the channel
Awesome work!
Thanks man! I love the work
Excellent 👍
You are a true artist.
Thank you Mike!
Excellent ......but how did the break happen in the first place????????
You know....I don't remember. This was a long time ago and I dont remember the story. Thank you for watching henery!
Careful lighting and choice of camera angles can make a flaw seem less noticeble
Ok...not sure your reason for the comment?
Excellent work! 👍
It was fun to work on. Thanks for commenting
Very cool!
Thank you brother! Appreciate it.
Great job sir👍
Thank you
Use very thin super glue👌
Master level.
Thank you Raihan
Bill,
I recently found and subscribed to your TH-cam channel and am really enjoying your videos! Please keep them coming. I also enjoy restoring the classics, but am nowhere near your level of craftsmanship, which is outstanding!
Question: What is the brand of artists color that you used to match the color/ stain of the Weatherby stock? I've not used these before and would appreciate any guidance you can offer?
Many thanks!
JB
Hi Jeff. Thank you! If you are referring to the artist oils that I mix in with the finish, I am using Windsor and Newton. I’m sure any high quality artist oil would work.
Bill,
Thank you! I'll be sure to pick some up and try them out.
JB
Bill,
Thank you! I'll be sure to pick some up and try them out.
JB
Bill,
Thank you! I'll be sure to pick some up and try them out.
JB
Bill,
Thank you! I'll be sure to pick some up and try them out.
JB
How amazing I’m practicing so one day I’ll be as good as you!
How did you get starting working on guns? Did you go to school or do an apprenticeship? I’m looking at trying to take myself to the next level! I found your videos while waiting for the glue to dry on my project!
I grew up in the industry. You can hear some of my story in this video: th-cam.com/video/thGmUeRZEyk/w-d-xo.html
U are just perfect 👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼
Wow, great work...!
Thank you!
Talented craftsman...
Thank you Andrew
Nice job
Thank you.
How much is this repair cost
The best video👍
Thank You
Great job. How much did something like this cost??
Thanks for the question. We work by the hour so the cost would always depend on the amount of work required to do the repair. We never know what to expect until it reveals itself. For instance having to pick all of the crystalized glue out of the break from a previous repair was unexpected and took time to accomplish.
Thanks
That turned out really well, especially after the hash job the previous person did on the repair.
Thank you for the comment Troy. Appreciate the feedback
What kind of epoxy? Brand?
For this repair Brownels
you are so talanted
Thank you for the complement and the comment!
I'm looking at a double sxs that was repaired at the wrist. It looks professional, but I'm concerned about it holding up.
Wow...without seeing it??? Depends on where; what gage; type of break; type of repair...so much matters
@@SixRoundsStudio I just talked to the man who did the repair. He glued it with guitar glue, with no reinforcement. I was skeptical cause I asked about reinforcement , he said: "that's what amateurs use". Anyway, that's what he said. BTW, it's a 12 g the break is perpendicular to the stock.
The repair guy also said "if it breaks again it will break in a different spot" .
@@stevedouglas5443 Where you from?
@@SixRoundsStudio Kalamazoo mi. The guy who did the repair owns a fairly large gunshop. Can I contact you?
Beautiful work a craftsman at work
Thank you Tracy!
Why the annpyong musoc the rest is so good, but i cant continue.... im human and it sounds horrible
Nice vid, you need a horse my friend!
Thank you...I think? Guess I miss the horse reference?
Do you have a school?
I dont. I have been mentoring several younger guys who are interested in the art and they are each working on one of their own firearms as I coach them. Thats about as "school" as it gets right now. Thanks for showing interest.
@@SixRoundsStudio I did some gunsmithing more armory work but I can build many parts. Awaiting my gunsmith license but in Trinidad it takes forever. Never got the opportunity to do stock making...perhaps if time permits our interaction I can take a trip and you can show me somethings.
@@raihanmohammed4776 Its a long way from Trinidad. I may do more wood working vids in the future.
Awesome job! But unfortunately, a lot of the secret technique seems to be, put 200,000 man-hours into it. It seems like this couldn't possibly be an economical alternative unless the cost of a replacement stock is several thousand dollars!
There are lots of reasons owners choose to repair or restore and not to replace. Cost is a very practical approach (sometimes replacements are not available or themselves very expensive). Other times emotions make the decisions (gun belonged to a friend or family member). And in the case of an antique or classic...its only original once so many owners want to maintain as much original as possible. Its interesting that you think the cost for repair is so high as to make it unreasonable an approach. Thank you for your observation and comment.
Secret Sauce Red recipe?
Your question?
@@SixRoundsStudio Sorry, not very specific.
What is your recipe for the Secret Sauce Red #2 and #3 that you used for color matching.
It matched so well
@@drd1924 Well....Its a secret ;) But I will tell you it involves red artist oils and mixing them into the finish until the color matches. More art and experience than science.
@@SixRoundsStudio Ahhh... the old ancient indian artist oil trick. Awesome thank you!
I was wondering if it was a special blend of wood stain, diesel and used motor oil or something
@@drd1924 Motor oil....hmmmmmm....
Great work. Get rid of the music. Its terrible
Thanks for the comment. I hope you watched other vids and subscribed.
@Jerry Davis Jerry, Thank you for the supporting comment.
🇪🇨👍🏻
🇪🇨👍🏻