Had a look and quite impressed.
I wonder if he will do them for my Senior
bertie
My mate Pete from Leicester who makes the Webley pistol grips that have sold on here, has advertised a set in walnut for a Tempest/Hurricane on fleabay -item number 130384268583
These are a bit different to those previously sold as he has hand chequered them to a very good standard
We each bought a set of chequering tools from Midway about the same time, after seeing a demonstration by an expert, but Pete seems to have taken to it like a duck to water whereas my efforts still leave a lot to be desired.
Still I have recut some worn chequering on some of my older rifles with some success, so i will persevere.
The grips are worth a look for anyone wanting to add a bit of class to their pistol
john
hold me back !!
Had a look and quite impressed.
I wonder if he will do them for my Senior
bertie
He might find that he has a "watcher".
Very nice; love my standard walnut ones he did.
John,
Wow excellent, Pete has upped his game. Any plans to take 'fixed' price orders' on here. Also will Pete be using his slant grip 'Template' for older pistols offering this option for the slant grip Mk1's and Senior's?
Rob
BSA & Webley
they look totally awesome he is a true craftsman
Webley Eclipse mk1 .22, " I want rats,lots of rats"
Pete showed me a set of walnut grips today at the club for a Tempest
These are made from walnut root and have incredible grain
They are also rock hard and actually ring when tapped together
To be honest the wood is so nice that it is a shame to chequer them but Pete had already chequered the RH side grip
Somehow he has acquired the skill of chequering walnut very quickly and it is hard to find fault with his work. If i could do half as well in twice the time I would be delighted
He intends to make some chequered grips from this root material for a senior/premier Rob, so it will be interesting to see the results
At present it takes him about 3 hours to chequer a set of grips, but I guess within a few weeks he will be cutting this time down to perhaps 1 hour/grip
At the demo we watched at the Newark show, a very experienced craftsman was taking almost 30 minutes/side on a (Turkish)walnut shotgun stock, he made it look so easy
John
hold me back !!