The Accurate Reloading Forums
West Africa Bebinga wood
15 December 2011, 09:10
nongweWest Africa Bebinga wood
Will the wood be strong enough to use for the stock on my 416 rugby.
15 December 2011, 18:29
Bailey BradshawBubinga is in the rosewood family. It's hard, heavy and oily, takes a nice finish. It has a tendancy to crack far easier than walnut. That tendancy will also apply to chipping.
I think it would be fine for a smaller caliber, might be to brittle for a heavy recoiling rifle.
15 December 2011, 18:32
Lord FrithHi,
Open ended questions are difficult at best. Most all woods will stand quite a bit of recoil for a while, but.... There are many other questions to pursue before a decision on bubinga. Density, carvability, grain structure, stability, appearance, ability to hold checkering, etc. are only a few considerations. Talk with a few professional stock makers for their input. Many invaluable resources out there.
I have whittled a few stocks over the years and have never heard or read of one using your chosen species. There are many sources containing comparative charts of many attributes of world-wide species. There are myriad reasons for walnut as the preferred species for gunstocks--all the desired attributes. I believe your wood is spelled bubinga and your caliber would be Rigby. May help your searches.
Good luck with this.
Stephen
15 December 2011, 18:40
WinkIt's mostly found in the forests of Central Africa (Gabon, Central African Republic, Cameroon), rather than West Africa.
http://www.higginshardwoods.co...ltyhardwoods/bubingaI used to hang around sawmills in the 70's when building schools in Central Africa, and there are times when the color is almost blood red, making for a very interesting color for a piece of wood. But I have never heard of a rifle stock being made of it, but don't know why it isn't done.
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15 December 2011, 18:43
BiebsThe Colt Sauers in 458 (African model) were stocked in Bubinga.
15 December 2011, 18:52
StonewallBiebs
You beat me while I looked up a photo.
Opps ! too big !!
15 December 2011, 18:57
Nomo4meI believe winchester made some heavy cal m-70's stocked in bubinga in the 1980's or thereabouts.
16 December 2011, 02:34
724wdthe bubinga i've handled is very heavy. heavier than most standard walnut. pretty, but heavy.
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16 December 2011, 05:49
Evan K.It has been used with a few rimfire benchrest stocks and with great success. Of course those aren't exactly heavily recoiling rifles...
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19 December 2011, 08:49
Michael RobinsonWeatherby also stocked their big .460 Magnum rifles in bubinga wood, back in the '60s.
Mike
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20 December 2011, 06:54
Mark ClarkThis place has bubinga stock blanks,
http://www.oldtreegunblanks.co...blanks.php?woodid=14http://www.oldtreegunblanks.co...blanks.php?woodid=14 The ones I have seen were like these blanks, highly figured and very nice.
Mark
20 December 2011, 08:24
WoodHunterIt is Bubinga.
Nice one on NitroX:
http://forums.nitroexpress.com...arch=true#Post17272030 December 2011, 22:34
temmiquote:
It has a tendancy to crack
In my view it is far to easy to crack.
02 January 2012, 06:22
zimbabweI think Bear Archery used to use it on the risers of their wood bows.
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