Cracked rifle stock. Repair or replace

Macintosh

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Feb 17, 2018
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@BigC usually a crack happens for a reason. Being minimally invasive is good, you just have to evaluate WHY it cracked and address that. Different actions create different stresses on wood, and a crack in one place may have different stresses on it than in a different place. A crack that formed from recoil setting the action back into the wood needs different treatment than something that happened because the wood expanded in wet/humid conditions around the metal forcing a crack to open. In addition to the crack repair, the real solution could likely involve bedding or sealing the wood not to address the crack itself, but to address the root cause of the crack so it doesnt get worse or happen again.
I and (I assume) others posted more major repairs, not to say thats the only way to deal with a crack, but to show that even a **major** crack is fairly easily repairable in a way that can handle use and recoil. Smaller cracks usually are not such a big deal, just smart to make sure it wont happen again while youre at it.
 
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BigC

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@BigC usually a crack happens for a reason. Being minimally invasive is good, you just have to evaluate WHY it cracked and address that. Different actions create different stresses on wood, and a crack in one place may have different stresses on it than in a different place. A crack that formed from recoil setting the action back into the wood needs different treatment than something that happened because the wood expanded in wet/humid conditions around the metal forcing a crack to open. In addition to the crack repair, the real solution could likely involve bedding or sealing the wood not to address the crack itself, but to address the root cause of the crack so it doesnt get worse or happen again.
I and (I assume) others posted more major repairs, not to say thats the only way to deal with a crack, but to show that even a **major** crack is fairly easily repairable in a way that can handle use and recoil. Smaller cracks usually are not such a big deal, just smart to make sure it wont happen again while youre at it.
I’m a little embarrassed to post this, but the crack was caused from the rifle falling from a tree stand. I thought I had attached it to the pull up rope to lower it with my pack but apparently I didn’t clip it right. When I went to let it down all I was left with was the rope in my hand. Needless to say my heart sank. It appeared to have landed on the butt stock / scope as that is where the mud and dirt was.
 

Macintosh

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Well, it happens. I once came out of the woods bird hunting, and there was a tiny, frail woman walking down the dirt road with a huge mutt dog off-leash that basically ran at my dog snarling the whole way. I put my unloaded custom-stocked shotgun on the roof of my truck cap so I could get my dog inside and away from Cujo, and long story short I drove off with it still there. As I rounded the corner to pull onto the pavement it slid onto the road and the wrist shattered into at least 4 different pieces. Yes, quite embarrassing.
Depending on where it broke, and depending on the wood grain there, it might or might not benefit from some reinforcement. Anyone would need to see some detailed pictures to say for sure either way.
 

Wapiti1

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Oddly enough, that is a good break. You know why it cracked. Ones that cracked on their own with no apparent reason can be more problematic.

If it cracked through to the rear action screw hole, it may be best to pillar it at this point.

A couple of notes. Epoxy and superglue will always show a line at the crack regardless how much pressure you put on it. They soak into the grain and finish will not take there. You can tint the epoxy, though, and it can be nearly invisible. Elmers or a similar wood glue will yield the most invisible repair and be plenty strong. Never use anything from Gorilla brand. They make good glue, but their formulas are designed to expand. It opens cracks and the polyurethane won't finish well.

Jeremy
 

robtattoo

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This old Husky was cracked right through the forearm. The crack was along the grain & about 4" long, running more than half way around the rifle.
I flexed the stock enough to spread the crack a tiny amount & used super thin superglue to flood the crack then basically let itself flex back closed.
That was about 200 9.3x57 rounds ago.

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I do a lot of this type of stuff
A good marine epoxy for cracks and breaks that require gap filling and a cyanoacrylic glue ( superglue) if the crack is narrow enough to draw it in by capillary action
Definitely don’t replace that stock. It will absolutely be able to be fixed.
 

Mojave

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Jun 13, 2019
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I had a Sauer 90 stock crack at the tang. I drilled a whole through both sides of the tang for long screw then threaded it in after putting epoxy in the whole and in the crack. Then sanded it flat, and touched up the finish.

Then I relieved the recoi lug and glass bedded the action in the stock to ensure it wouldn't move. Drilled a whole from the back of the tang toward the grip cap and put another threaded brass screw in there with epoxy. I didn't go deep enough to screw up the grip cap.
 
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BigC

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This is what I’m working with.
I have it flexed open a little to show the crack.
 
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