skydiver386
AH elite
- Joined
- Oct 18, 2023
- Messages
- 1,602
- Reaction score
- 6,218
- Media
- 30
- Member of
- SCI, NAHC
- Hunted
- South Africa, Ohio, Florida, Wyoming, Arizona
Looks like some Bastogne walnut blanks. Depending on whether it was flat or quarter sawn, you'd have some really nice looking figure.Bubinga is a beautiful wood… I’ve used it extensively for handles on knives and also have used it to make cutting boards…
The challenge I think in using it for a gunstock would be it’s weight (as Bob mentioned earlier) it’s an incredibly dense and heavy wood… kiln dried it’s about 5lbs per board foot compared to walnut which comes in about 3.5 lbs per board foot..
It would make a super sturdy and beautiful stock I believe.. but it would be heavy like a laminate as opposed to most hardwood stocks ..which as skydiver points out, might be welcome on a DG rifle…)
Were I looking to do an African hardwood stocks, I’d go with bocote… it’s typically extremely figured… it’s also got a lot of contrast with very light colors around the outer portions of the tree and super dark portions closer to center… it’s very hard and is somewhere in between bubinga and walnut in weight… usually about 4lbs per board foot if I recall correctly…
Bocote generally looks like the block below
View attachment 710528
