Since Bruce let the cat out of the bag, with his assistance, encouragement and goading I have been working on developing K98k forends. It has been a long, tedious, and expensive endeavor. A few comments in response to what has been said here. New manufacture k98k stocks are, in my opinion, not viable for the time being. I have approached several manufacturers of laminate and all have categorically refused to even consider quoting, let alone consider making a historically accurate laminate. There are some technical issues that can be over come with money, time, and demand, which these stocks lack all 3.
Part of the problem people don't understand with wood is the variability. From the beginning to the end, there are countless issues to over come. Even to make a walnut stock, finding suppliers of high quality, straight grain, appropriate length blanks is difficult, if not impossible, never mind the expense. If you manage to find the necessary blanks, the next issue becomes capital and labor. In any manufacturing process, you either pay in capital investment or you pay in labor. The stocks could be made the labor intensive route, using multiple machines, to complete single or a few operations. However this requires significant space and either a number of idle machines or a number of workers. On the flip side, the stocks could be made complete with minimal labor, using CNC. This avenue is so expensive it simply is not justifiable for the quantity and cost of the products we are discussing.
All of those issues brings us back to producing fore ends in an attempt to save/salvage as many duffle cut stocks as possible. Bruce has been collecting original material whenever stocks can be found cheap or free that might be able to be salvaged. I've been working through the processes using maple and walnut to get a reliable process nailed down. Wood is anything but reliable or consistent. Trying to mix in 80 year old laminate sections recovered from stocks is daunting to near overwhelming.
I have always had a healthy does of respect for the machinists and tool makers of the era. I have metal working machinery dating back to 1895, and started out in the trade running a shaper from 1904 and a horizontal from 1923. Most people simply don't have the knowledge or experience to even appreciate what it took to manufacture a rifle, be it an 1871 or a K98k. I have since learned an extreme appreciation for the stock makers and wood workers from that era. When I pick up an 1871, I am simply dumb founded at the complexity of the stock.
If there is enough interest I can start another thread and detail the process. I will warn you it is a SLOW process. I've been working on it here and there for near close to a year. It'll likely be spring next year before any product is really available.