GGTB Woodie - How To - Long Read and Lots of Pictures

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Torqueguy

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I had some spare time this weekend due to the power outage and what-not. Over the last 6 months, I've had lots of people wanting to buy my woodies ...;) but rather than sell them, I thought I would show you guys how to make your own. Warning to DSpin, shield your eyes brother.

I like to use the Aluminum ones although I've made them from old worn out Nickle plated brass. Those are a bit heavy for front shirt pocket carry but it's a matter of preference. On the old nickle ones, I prefer to have those silver plated. That will be another post later on.

First of all, many thanks to Imeo for dreaming these machines up. Truly works of perfection, they are the stealthiest non VV HV machines out there and I think the 16340 is probably my favorite battery due to the power and size.

These are not hogged out of solid wood, rather, I use wood veneer which is real wood, shaved paper thin by specialty wood shops. Veneer is about 1/16" thick and is stiff when it's dry. I try to use exotic wood like ebony or maple. I used Walnut Burl for this particular piece.

Here's a piece of the initial veneer. I wet it down so you could see the grain since dry wood cannot be fully appreciated.
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This is a side shot so you can see how thin it is. It's brittle when dry so be careful
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I put the veneer in a flat pan and pour hot water over it slowly letting it soak. This will make the veneer pliable and will allow you to cut it to size with normal scissors
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I cut the veneer about 1/8 longer than the GGTB on either side. It's important to keep the veneer wet and gently roll the veneer a little at a time (it will crack if not fully softened and pliable) This is a labor of love, don't rush it.
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Very important step here. Cut a small piece of tape and cover the inside of the button hole. You will use 2 part epoxy to glue the veneer on. The purpose of the tape is to create a "reservoir" for Vaseline to protect the threads from the epoxy. If you're not careful here, you will get epoxy in the threads and you will learn to curse in foreign languages.
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Also use plenty of vaseline on the top and bottom threads. This shows a preliminary wrap of veneer and also the vaseline on the threads. Do not get vaseline on the wood as this will keep it from properly absorbing the epoxy
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OK Dspin, look away now. The aluminum is very slick and must be roughed up with 150 grade sandpaper to create nooks and crannies for epoxy adhesion. Use long strokes and make sure the entire surface is roughed up with striations. You should be able to feel them with your fingernail.
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Moisten the veneer again to soften it up but only damp, not too wet. The moisture will not affect the epoxy drying and if the wood is too dry it will crack, be gentle, remember your honeymoon here. I use 45 minute cure two part epoxy. You don't want something that will cure too quickly because you'll need time to manipulate the wood. Mix the epoxy well, give it a minute to blend
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and apply very thoroughly on the inside surface of the veneer.

Make sure to coat the entire surface of the veneer but don't overdo it or it will squish out all over the place. We want to avoid getting epoxy on the outer surface of the wood. Now just gently roll the thing tightly on a flat surface making sure you don't have any gaps between the aluminum and the veneer. I usually cut the veneer so I get two full wraps of wood. You will sand about 1/2 of the top layer off to get it to size right and to smooth the finish so it should leave about 1.5 wraps of wood. When rolling this thing, just remember the 70's and it helps to listen to Pink Floyd whilst rolling.
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Once the thing is completely rolled on and tight, I bind the hell out of it with rubber bands. The more the better. You will get some seepage of epoxy on the outside of the veneer but we'll sand that off. Some rubber bands will stick to the outside as well. That's why we have an extra half wrap of veneer, so we can sand all that out later.
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This is the semi-finished product. If you notice, the wood is dry again so it looks like it has little grain. No worries, we'll make the grain come out when we apply the finish coat. Note the fire button hole. It looks like one hole but that's actually 4 or 5 tiny 1/16" holes. I use a drill press for this and gently knock out the walls of wood covering the button hole. I make the initial hole and then very very carefully, carve away at the hole until I hit the threads. Aluminum is soft and you can damage the threads. You want to carefully remove wood away without touching the aluminum. This is the riskiest part of the whole process. The tapped hole is metric and a hard to find tap in the US so I just chase the wood back by hand with an exacto knife
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Here you can see the seam of the overlap. If the epoxy was properly done, you will get a nice stiff and well glued edge so you can just sand the seam away.
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This is as far as I've gotten today. The finishing process is a project all to itself and I'll have to dedicate a second post to that. I'll leave you with some pictures of other finished woodies so you can see how they turn out.

Hope you enjoyed this thus far. I had a blast doing it and hopefully, you'll see after dedicating so much time and energy to this, I just can't part with them.

Here's an Ebony TB. The pistol is my Match Springfield. I made the Cocobolo grips on that thing as well
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Same one, next to a TB Mini I cut back for airplane stealth vaping. Don't tell Capt Steve!!
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This one is lighter Gaboon Striped Ebony, just finished up last spring
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And here's the Gabbon next to pitch black Ebony side by side.
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Hope Bruce gets some more SS tops and bottoms. I love them and they look great on the finished product
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Cheers and Bye for now

Torque
 

imeothanasis

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wow!!!!!!!!

the final product is gorgeus Torq, I love it!! And its very easy to be done for someone that has the time and the desire to do it. Exellent job, exellent result, exellent look for people that like wooden mods and the strength of a metal construction at the same time

very well done torq, thanks for sharing this with all of us:):):)
 

Torqueguy

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Thanks Imeo. I am a GGTB lover for all the obvious reasons, its small, light, robust, easy to fix but never breaks anyway, and most importantly, its very portable. What I missed was the beauty of wood. I love Brad's work and I have two of his grips one at home and one at work but for carrying in my front shirt pocket and for airplane travel, there is nothing like an aluminum GGTB and especially now with the wood I have the best of both worlds.

I can't wait for my Penelope, now that will be a winner combination.

Thanks Imeo!
 

Torqueguy

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Really nice Torq thanks for sharing that brother. Have to go revive dspin now :laugh:

I would hold a bottle of Flitz or Simichrome under his nose till he starts to stir. Everytime I rough up a GGTB I always get a flash of his avatar and my Catholic guilt steps in. I have to remind myself, its for a higher purpose...must have another woodie.

Just for the record, I like shiny stuff too
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Torqueguy

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Ok, here goes the rest of the story

The next step of the process is to sand carefully and evenly with 150 grit. I purposely want to leave the surface a bit rough in order to absorb as much finish as possible
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Here's the button hole, all cleaned out and pretty
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And here's the top cleaned up as well. We want this area clean for proper conductivity
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And this is the moment all woodworkers wait for. when you apply the initial sealer. That's because before the sealer, the thing you're working on is wood. After the sealer, the real color of the wood comes out and the wood comes alive.
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The wood is absorbing sealer like a sponge at this time. I work on this just as if I was working on an exotic gun stock, no difference. This thing will probably absorb 5 or 6 coats of sealer, effectively make the wood impervious to the elements
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This is the second coat
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Third coat. At this point, we have to let the sealer dry in the wood. If we put more on, it will run. We need to wait for the thing to dry. I'll let this thing set up until tomorrow. The surface will be rough and what I'll do is call wet sanding which is done by hand on very expensive guns. I'll dip some maroon finish pad in finish and will gently "sand and melt" a bit of the surface creating a slurry of ultrafine sawdust mixed with sealer and I'll wipe the surface against the grain, in effect sealing the open pores of the wood with sawdust. The effect is miraculous. Beretta does this on their Presidential line of shotguns starting at about $20K. It's way too time consuming to do normally because it's all handwork. The final product is a perfect piece of wood with all of it's surface imperfections sealed. More on the final finish tomorrow once I get this thing sealed
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This one's for Dspin! Some bling for you my friend...
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imeothanasis

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I will very soon buy a gun. Here in Greece things go more crazy every day. I need something small like the one on photo Torq.
Are you able to buy a gun without a lisence?
Very cool Torq! By the way, who makes that little side by side 22 pocket rocket? I NEED one of those :D (for the haters)
 
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dirquist

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I will very soon buy a gun. Her in Greece things go more crazy every day. I need something small like the one on photo Torq.
Are you able to buy a gun without a lisence?

That right there was not a small gun by any means :) That there looks like a .45acp or a 1911 style 9mm.

If you want something small Id get a S&W Shield. At least that will be my next for carry gun :)
 
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Torqueguy

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Very cool Torq! By the way, who makes that little side by side 22 pocket rocket? I NEED one of those :D (for the haters)
Rick, thats made in Brazil. Its called a peasant gun because it was low cost and was made to be sold to the natives in the Brazilian Amazon. It was never imported into the US and is a collectors piece because its a side by side. Phoenix makes a great little 22 semi auto thats cheap and indestructible if you're looking for something small. I took that little side by side, machined new firing pins from 4140 hardened steel for extra strength, fitted the thing with new coil springs and had the thing chrome plated. This thing goes bang every time now no matter what and I carry it when I'm fishing. I shoot snakeshot out of it
 

Torqueguy

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That right there was not a small gun by any means :) That there looks like a .45acp or a 1911 style 9mm.

If you want something small Id get a S&W Shield. At least that will be my next for carry gun :)
Dir
Correct. Thats a Springfield Match gun in 9mm. Its a 1911 but in a softer shooting 9mm and is my target gun. I used to shoot a .45 but it has too much recoil for precision shooting. Like they say, its not the size of the gun but how well you use it. Thats what I tell my wife anyway...
 

Rick.45cal

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I knew it was something special thanks for the explaination Torq! It caught my eye, (fine firearms are one of my guilty pleasures) Something about a double barrel side by side with dual triggers and double hammers... I've always wanted a 12 gauge "coach gun" with the old school double hammers. :p

Tgoode, I've actually watched an episode of "how it's made" with the derringers you speak of. Not really my style, but very cool. I'm pretty much covered with my carry set up. Ed Brown Special Forces .45cal is my daily, and an old school S&W 38 as my deep cover ;) It would be kind of nice to have a Rorabaugh R9S though :D

Imeo, There are freaking nut jobs everywhere now a days... it's a damn shame, but to live with blinders on, is asking to be the next victim. Besides now you have to worry about face eating zombies (at least in Florida) 8-o
 
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