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Posted

I just bought a Marlin 336 / 30-30. I was on a Marlin owners forum and there is a gentleman there that makes some outstanding looking butt covers. I am a knifemaker and have made a couple dozen knife sheaths. The last 4 or five I kind of knew what I was doing. I would really like to try and make a butt cover for my new rifle. Any help or direction would be appreciated. Thanks.

-frank

Posted

I just bought a Marlin 336 / 30-30. I was on a Marlin owners forum and there is a gentleman there that makes some outstanding looking butt covers. I am a knifemaker and have made a couple dozen knife sheaths. The last 4 or five I kind of knew what I was doing. I would really like to try and make a butt cover for my new rifle. Any help or direction would be appreciated. Thanks.

-frank

I made a fancy carved and tooled one for my husbands DPMS "target" rifle. I started out by making a paper pattern that fit the stock. Make sure the leather won't interfere with any of the working parts of the gun, and when you cut it out, make it a tad bigger so that it allows for the thickness of the leather, or it won't be a perfect fit (Don't ask me how I found this out as a newbie to leather.)

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Posted (edited)

Panch....

I doubt you'll find an actual pattern...how bout you wrap paper around yours and cut out your own pattern.

You can do a simple lacing job instead of hand stitching.

Try searching "buttcovers" here.

Edited by Rayban

Rayban
www.rgleather.net

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Posted (edited)

I just bought a Marlin 336 / 30-30. I was on a Marlin owners forum and there is a gentleman there that makes some outstanding looking butt covers. I am a knifemaker and have made a couple dozen knife sheaths. The last 4 or five I kind of knew what I was doing. I would really like to try and make a butt cover for my new rifle. Any help or direction would be appreciated. Thanks.

-frank

Pancho, years ago I did a butt cover for an 870 Remington police shotgun with loops for extra shotshells. I used a paper pattern I made myself that went from the base of the recoil pad up to the rear of the pistol grip. I'll dig thru my stuff and try to find a pic for you. It's on one of the disks somewhere. I laced it on along the bottom of the stock so that it could be removed if necessary. Holes were punched along the two ajoining edges and metal eyelets were inserted so that the leather wouldn's tear. Also so that it could be tightened if the leather streched. One thing to remember is that under recoil the cover may try to slip forward because of the taper in the stock. I cured this on the shotgun by cutting a slot in the rubber just above the base of the recoil pad and running a wide strap thru the pad and used a press-the-dot snap to keep it tight.

Aside from that, in the early '70s I did five rifle stocks for one customer that were completely covered in leather. I doubt that I'll ever do another one.....they were the most difficult pieces of work I ever did. In them the leather was bonded to the wood and was definately NOT removable. These three are the only pics I have of one of them prior to finishing. Excused the quality....they are digital pics taken of 35mm prints taken back then. Hope this gives you some ideas or helps a little. Mike

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Edited by katsass

NOTE TO SELF: Never try to hold a cat and an operating Dust buster at the same time!!

At my age I find that I can live without sex..........but not without my glasses.

Being old has an advantage.......nobody expects me to do anything in a hurry.

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Posted

Pancho, years ago I did a butt cover for an 870 Remington police shotgun with loops for extra shotshells. I used a paper pattern I made myself that went from the base of the recoil pad up to the rear of the pistol grip. I'll dig thru my stuff and try to find a pic for you. It's on one of the disks somewhere. I laced it on along the bottom of the stock so that it could be removed if necessary. Holes were punched along the two ajoining edges and metal eyelets were inserted so that the leather wouldn's tear. Also so that it could be tightened if the leather streched. One thing to remember is that under recoil the cover may try to slip forward because of the taper in the stock. I cured this on the shotgun by cutting a slot in the rubber just above the base of the recoil pad and running a wide strap thru the pad and used a press-the-dot snap to keep it tight.

Aside from that, in the early '70s I did five rifle stocks for one customer that were completely covered in leather. I doubt that I'll ever do another one.....they were the most difficult pieces of work I ever did. In them the leather was bonded to the wood and was definately NOT removable. These three are the only pics I have of one of them prior to finishing. Excused the quality....they are digital pics taken of 35mm prints taken back then. Hope this gives you some ideas or helps a little. Mike

022.jpg

018a.jpg

021.jpg

Thanks for the response guys. I can understand what you guys advise. I am just not sure what thickness of leather and how the end piece and wrap around piece get stitched together. I will keep on researching though. Thanks for the pics!

-frank

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Posted

That is indeed the Katsass!!

Frank, get to Tandy and get Al Stohlman's " How to make Cases" It's a three book set and the first one will show you all you need to know to make you a buttcover.

I insist it'a must have book for anyone who wants to learn leather work.

Thanks for the response guys. I can understand what you guys advise. I am just not sure what thickness of leather and how the end piece and wrap around piece get stitched together. I will keep on researching though. Thanks for the pics!

-frank

Rayban
www.rgleather.net

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Posted

Not sure of the date, but Leatherworker & Saddlers Journal had a pattern a few years ago. I will try and find it for you.

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Posted

Hey poncho I happen to have an issue of leathercrafters and saddlers journal that has just such a thing in it. Let me know if you wnat I can get the issue # and you can but the back issue.

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