The weight does.
No
1960 ninteen sixty walnut stock plain finish with recoil pad
Recoil of a firearm is based on how heavy and fast is the bullet, and how much does the firearm weigh. Change any one of the 3, and recoil will change. The AVERAGE .270 Winchester (16.5 lbs recoil) will have less recoil than a 30-06 (17.6 lbs recoil) but more than a .308 Winchester ( 15.8 lbs recoil). How recoil FEELS can be affected by several things, including shape of the stock, recoil control devices (such as pads) which spread recoil over time, etc. Good article for some more reading for you-http:/wwwzperiodzchuckhawkszperiodzcom/recoil_tablezperiodzhtm
Jeff's Outfitters has both finished and unfinished rear stocks for the Winchester M1903. ~$60
A strait stock will recoil strait back but when a bent stock recoils it will recoil with the muzzle going upwards. A strait stock allows you to stay on target better.
sorry, no it won't. the trigger guard and floor plate, the hole spacing, the recoil lug, barrel, and several other measurements are proprietary to either post or pre 64 70s.
Use a Phillips screw driver to unscrew the two recoil pad screws and remove the recoil pad. With the recoil pad removed, you'll see a hole that goes through the length of the stock. To remove the butt stock, you'll need a socket wrench with extensions long enough to go through most of the length of the stock. I believe it's a half inch hex bolt. Unscrew the bolt that mounts the stock, and it's off. The pistol grip should come with a bolt to attach it, probably a socket head cap screw.
Winchester hld - red
http://www.gunville.com/products/winchester-57-stock
All else being equal, no
If you're looking for a used original Winchester stock, contact Numrich arms.If you want something new, Google "Stock, Winchester, 1894 OR 94"
No. A standard AR15 has a buffer tube that runs inside the stock that contains the recoil spring.