RokStok

clperry

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Dec 5, 2019
Messages
283
Yes.

Well, “any” is a tall task. However, he is doing one for a Blaser R8 now, and that is anything but simple.

I have a couple x bolts that I’d like to have done. They just ended up being more expensive than I thought they would be. I’ll continue to save.


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mxgsfmdpx

WKR
Joined
Oct 22, 2019
Messages
6,631
Location
Outside
Haven’t seen much on the wood Rokstok…..should be some out in the wild as 7/10 are sold. Anybody confirm weight and lead time?
Hey man. I have one in hand and have around 8 shooting days with it. Shooting side by side with the carbon Rokstoks. I've got the flu from literal hell since early last week and was hoping to get a bit more time behind the gun, but I am working on a quick write up on the wood Rokstok.

Some teaser details from my write up...

Bare weight (no trigger guard, no spacers) 31 OZ

bareweight.jpg


All in weight: Tikka 260 Rem, factory stainless fluted 22.5" barrel, Maven RS1.2, UM Low Tikka Rings, High Desert Stainless Bottom Metal, Factory Plastic Mag with 3 rounds of 143 ELDX.

weight.jpg

Before I remounted rings and moved the scope further back I left the gun as is, as this rifle was previously in a carbon Rokstok. There was no discrepancy in the rifles zero when moving from carbon to wood. No issues with inletting and I found that it liked 50ish" lbs with both metal and plastic trigger guards with both factory and waters magazines clipping in effortlessly at that torque.


260wood.jpg


The chip in the wood is user error when adding in the spacers. The bottom replacement (longer) number 10 screw was ever so slightly stripped when going in, so it was pulled and pre-drilled and epoxy added. It went in fine but felt like it may strip again upon tightening. I added in a redundancy wood screw below the bottom main #10 screw by predrilling and then screwing in. I should have used a 1/2" shorter screw as when I snugged it up, it chipped the stock. The chip has since been filled with a very thin, long cure time, hardened black epoxy and is good to go.

Full write up coming sometime soon.
 

JM151

FNG
Joined
May 11, 2021
Messages
59
It’s a custom wood stock- actual “custom”, someone is hand making them. Lead time is several months, which is silly short in the wood stock world.

Weight is 35’ish ounces- that’s a real 35oz, not a “best case”. There have been versions made that are sub 30oz. I am shooting one that is 27.7oz with a real recoil pad.

The carbon fiber ROKStok is legitimately excellent in design and function- however as I have stated since the very beginning, my goal was to get wood versions made for me. Wood is better at everything save cost, weight, and weather resistance in function. Properly done wood stocks however can correct the weight and weather performance.
I don’t know how to be more candid about this- if someone wants a lifetime quality stock, the wood RokStoks made as they are- are it. One that I have has the most surface level oil finish (read not what a production version would be), has spent days and days in the rain/snow/sleet, 2 weeks in SE Alaska in and around salt water- including being used briefly as a paddle, 4,000+ rounds so far of “my use”, been strapped to a pack/snow machine/atv’s/UTV’s/trailers/; 5 or 6 ice and snow freeze evals, etc. It has never been cleaned or re-oiled and has never lost zero.
I also have a poly finished stock that has nearly the same use, with the same outcome.

I was prepared to pay $3,000 plus for a proper wood stock and wait 2 years. At sub $2,000 and 4-5 months- they are an absolute steal.
I’ve been eyeing them since they dropped. 35 oz is not bad at all. Just trying to figure out what to build with it….redo my Fierce 300 wm with that stock or new build in a 338 Edge.
 

Dobermann

WKR
Joined
Sep 17, 2016
Messages
2,125
Location
EnZed
Hey man. I have one in hand and have around 8 shooting days with it. Shooting side by side with the carbon Rokstoks. I've got the flu from literal hell since early last week and was hoping to get a bit more time behind the gun, but I am working on a quick write up on the wood Rokstok.

Some teaser details from my write up...

Bare weight (no trigger guard, no spacers) 31 OZ

View attachment 834599


All in weight: Tikka 260 Rem, factory stainless fluted 22.5" barrel, Maven RS1.2, UM Low Tikka Rings, High Desert Stainless Bottom Metal, Factory Plastic Mag with 3 rounds of 143 ELDX.

View attachment 834601

Before I remounted rings and moved the scope further back I left the gun as is, as this rifle was previously in a carbon Rokstok. There was no discrepancy in the rifles zero when moving from carbon to wood. No issues with inletting and I found that it liked 50ish" lbs with both metal and plastic trigger guards with both factory and waters magazines clipping in effortlessly at that torque.


View attachment 834606


The chip in the wood is user error when adding in the spacers. The bottom replacement (longer) number 10 screw was ever so slightly stripped when going in, so it was pulled and pre-drilled and epoxy added. It went in fine but felt like it may strip again upon tightening. I added in a redundancy wood screw below the bottom main #10 screw by predrilling and then screwing in. I should have used a 1/2" shorter screw as when I snugged it up, it chipped the stock. The chip has since been filled with a very thin, long cure time, hardened black epoxy and is good to go.

Full write up coming sometime soon.
Thanks for the update and details - and get well soon!
 

eoperator

WKR
Joined
Apr 4, 2018
Messages
1,256
Hey man. I have one in hand and have around 8 shooting days with it. Shooting side by side with the carbon Rokstoks. I've got the flu from literal hell since early last week and was hoping to get a bit more time behind the gun, but I am working on a quick write up on the wood Rokstok.

Some teaser details from my write up...

Bare weight (no trigger guard, no spacers) 31 OZ

View attachment 834599
That is some awsome stippling.
 

Speaks

Lil-Rokslider
Classified Approved
Joined
Jul 27, 2024
Messages
158
Location
MN
It’s a custom wood stock- actual “custom”, someone is hand making them. Lead time is several months, which is silly short in the wood stock world.

Weight is 35’ish ounces- that’s a real 35oz, not a “best case”. There have been versions made that are sub 30oz. I am shooting one that is 27.7oz with a real recoil pad.

The carbon fiber ROKStok is legitimately excellent in design and function- however as I have stated since the very beginning, my goal was to get wood versions made for me. Wood is better at everything save cost, weight, and weather resistance in function. Properly done wood stocks however can correct the weight and weather performance.
I don’t know how to be more candid about this- if someone wants a lifetime quality stock, the wood RokStoks made as they are- are it. One that I have has the most surface level oil finish (read not what a production version would be), has spent days and days in the rain/snow/sleet, 2 weeks in SE Alaska in and around salt water- including being used briefly as a paddle, 4,000+ rounds so far of “my use”, been strapped to a pack/snow machine/atv’s/UTV’s/trailers/; 5 or 6 ice and snow freeze evals, etc. It has never been cleaned or re-oiled and has never lost zero.
I also have a poly finished stock that has nearly the same use, with the same outcome.

I was prepared to pay $3,000 plus for a proper wood stock and wait 2 years. At sub $2,000 and 4-5 months- they are an absolute steal.

I have been eying one on the site for awhile. I love a good wood stock rifle. What are your thoughts around which pad option to go with and which if any rail option? I never use a bi-pod though occasionally use a tripod. Are the rails reasonable to take on and off?
 

mxgsfmdpx

WKR
Joined
Oct 22, 2019
Messages
6,631
Location
Outside
That is some awsome stippling.
That is apart of the review as well. It's really well done but VERY aggressive on my stock in particular.

For barehand work it's great, but I shoot a lot with thin merino fingerless gloves, both in Summer due to extreme AZ heat and Winter when it's cold in the mornings.

It is so aggressive that the wide pattern sewn thin merino catches and frays on the grip areas, and doesn't allow my off-hand to freely slide up and down the grip area of the stock. I very lightly sanded the grip areas down just a bit and resolved that issue. With leather or other material gloves it's not as bad as the merino gloves.

I would still order with stippling as it's excellent and needed, just a bit aggressive on mine. A few minutes properly sanding and it's just right now.

Video from when it was new...

 

Wiscgunner

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Jun 24, 2018
Messages
283
Location
Madison, WI
Hey man. I have one in hand and have around 8 shooting days with it. Shooting side by side with the carbon Rokstoks. I've got the flu from literal hell since early last week and was hoping to get a bit more time behind the gun, but I am working on a quick write up on the wood Rokstok.

Some teaser details from my write up...

Bare weight (no trigger guard, no spacers) 31 OZ

View attachment 834599


All in weight: Tikka 260 Rem, factory stainless fluted 22.5" barrel, Maven RS1.2, UM Low Tikka Rings, High Desert Stainless Bottom Metal, Factory Plastic Mag with 3 rounds of 143 ELDX.

View attachment 834601

Before I remounted rings and moved the scope further back I left the gun as is, as this rifle was previously in a carbon Rokstok. There was no discrepancy in the rifles zero when moving from carbon to wood. No issues with inletting and I found that it liked 50ish" lbs with both metal and plastic trigger guards with both factory and waters magazines clipping in effortlessly at that torque.


View attachment 834606


The chip in the wood is user error when adding in the spacers. The bottom replacement (longer) number 10 screw was ever so slightly stripped when going in, so it was pulled and pre-drilled and epoxy added. It went in fine but felt like it may strip again upon tightening. I added in a redundancy wood screw below the bottom main #10 screw by predrilling and then screwing in. I should have used a 1/2" shorter screw as when I snugged it up, it chipped the stock. The chip has since been filled with a very thin, long cure time, hardened black epoxy and is good to go.

Full write up coming sometime soon.
That is a really nice looking stock!
 

realunlucky

Super Moderator
Staff member
Joined
Jan 20, 2013
Messages
13,283
Location
Eastern Utah
Hey man. I have one in hand and have around 8 shooting days with it. Shooting side by side with the carbon Rokstoks. I've got the flu from literal hell since early last week and was hoping to get a bit more time behind the gun, but I am working on a quick write up on the wood Rokstok.

Some teaser details from my write up...

Bare weight (no trigger guard, no spacers) 31 OZ

View attachment 834599


All in weight: Tikka 260 Rem, factory stainless fluted 22.5" barrel, Maven RS1.2, UM Low Tikka Rings, High Desert Stainless Bottom Metal, Factory Plastic Mag with 3 rounds of 143 ELDX.

View attachment 834601

Before I remounted rings and moved the scope further back I left the gun as is, as this rifle was previously in a carbon Rokstok. There was no discrepancy in the rifles zero when moving from carbon to wood. No issues with inletting and I found that it liked 50ish" lbs with both metal and plastic trigger guards with both factory and waters magazines clipping in effortlessly at that torque.


View attachment 834606


The chip in the wood is user error when adding in the spacers. The bottom replacement (longer) number 10 screw was ever so slightly stripped when going in, so it was pulled and pre-drilled and epoxy added. It went in fine but felt like it may strip again upon tightening. I added in a redundancy wood screw below the bottom main #10 screw by predrilling and then screwing in. I should have used a 1/2" shorter screw as when I snugged it up, it chipped the stock. The chip has since been filled with a very thin, long cure time, hardened black epoxy and is good to go.

Full write up coming sometime soon.
Dang that stainless and walnut looks great

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T_Widdy

Lil-Rokslider
Shoot2HuntU
Joined
Nov 24, 2023
Messages
256
Location
Wyoming
It’s a custom wood stock- actual “custom”, someone is hand making them. Lead time is several months, which is silly short in the wood stock world.

Weight is 35’ish ounces- that’s a real 35oz, not a “best case”. There have been versions made that are sub 30oz. I am shooting one that is 27.7oz with a real recoil pad.

The carbon fiber ROKStok is legitimately excellent in design and function- however as I have stated since the very beginning, my goal was to get wood versions made for me. Wood is better at everything save cost, weight, and weather resistance in function. Properly done wood stocks however can correct the weight and weather performance.
I don’t know how to be more candid about this- if someone wants a lifetime quality stock, the wood RokStoks made as they are- are it. One that I have has the most surface level oil finish (read not what a production version would be), has spent days and days in the rain/snow/sleet, 2 weeks in SE Alaska in and around salt water- including being used briefly as a paddle, 4,000+ rounds so far of “my use”, been strapped to a pack/snow machine/atv’s/UTV’s/trailers/; 5 or 6 ice and snow freeze evals, etc. It has never been cleaned or re-oiled and has never lost zero.
I also have a poly finished stock that has nearly the same use, with the same outcome.

I was prepared to pay $3,000 plus for a proper wood stock and wait 2 years. At sub $2,000 and 4-5 months- they are an absolute steal.
Would a Sako a7 be any problem for him?
 
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