RokStok

Dobermann

WKR
Joined
Sep 17, 2016
Messages
2,132
Location
EnZed
It very sharp, very clean stippling. The edges can be knocked down from the maker easily. Also, you could get checkering.
Good to know. What are your thoughts about stippling vs checkering?

I rarely use merino gloves while shooting, and had been planning on ordering one (or a few) with stippling ...
 

wyosam

WKR
Joined
Aug 5, 2019
Messages
1,454
That wood Rokstock has my attention. Due to a broken Mesa Altitude I recently put a factory wood stock on one of my rifles, and remembered how nice wood is to shoot (and look at). I’ll probably pick up a rokstock at some point, theoretically anyway. Assuming I like it I’ll get the fit where I want it, then I’ll probably need a wood one.


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rbutcher1234

Lil-Rokslider
Joined
Jul 2, 2023
Messages
221
I found the normal 13.5 LOP to be almost just there, so I ordered the wood with the longer 1” pad to put it right at 13.75.

I should add, pretty much all my guns have a longer LOP than the Rokstok, yet the Rokstok is very comfortable and I don’t feel like it needs to be really any longer at all. Pretty interesting.
 
Joined
Oct 15, 2022
Messages
67
All of the women in the world actually named "Karen" at birth must really hate the use of their name in society today as a pejorative slang term

Can you imagine? Someone asks them "what's your name?" - - - and they have to respond with "Karen".....oh, the reactions must be priceless!

The popularity of the name "Karen" has dropped like a rock.....(chart below is from Social Security website, and goes from 2020 to 2000) Karen was once the 141st most popular name for females, it is not even in the top 1000 names after the year 2020. Ouch!

The poor women that are now stuck with that name! Society will turn them into a bunch of Karens.

View attachment 833499
My step mom is named Karen.. the name fits the personality too perfectly.
 

fwafwow

WKR
Joined
Apr 8, 2018
Messages
5,744
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.
I wish I had not seen this.

In my head: "you don't need that. You are better than this." Also in my head: "But if I order the wood Rokstok, maybe it will be delivered around the time that Tikka releases a 6mm CM."
 
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