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Hi I have a Sako 85M in 9.3 x 66 that shoots incredibly well. However, on the last occasion I shot it I noticed the barrel touching the right hand side of the barrel channel. (sorry I do not have photos of that) Took it apart & noticed that the 2 wood screw holding the plate were not quite tight. Now the recoil of a 9.3 x 66 is quite stiff especially as the whole rifle weighs less than 8lbs. Therefore there was a little bit of play in this plate. Was thinking that those little wood screws would never hold up to the pounding over the years so the thought of whether to glass it in or not? Has anyone had any experience with glassing in this recoil lug plate. If you have: 1. Did you permanently bond it in or keep it removeable? 2. Do you have the bottom of the oval lug touching the stock or floating? 3. Before I glass it do I need to enlarge the inletting for the lug to get a greater thickness of glass? Especially behind the lug I suppose. I have attached photos to show what I mean. If you don't mind also the reasons for why you have done it the way you have. Were you happy with the results or did it make little difference. Thanks in advance. JohnT | ||
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One of Us |
JohnT A rather strange method of bedding the recoil lug with potential for one or two differant scenarios happening. If the lug on the receiver bottoms out on the wood in the plate recess then the wood screws are relied on to hold the plate in place and stop it rattling around. If the receiver lug has some clearance from the wood and allows the receiver to pull down tightly on the plate then the wood screws really play no part in the process and the recoil lug in the stock recess plays it's part with everything clamped down hard provided of course the lug fits the recess snuggly. To glass bed you would really need to relieve the recess in the stock. Personally I would just put a bit of glass in the recess and let it squeeze out under the plate. Looking in your photos, loose screws on the plate would not effect your barrel alignment in the stock as you can see the plate is recessed a little into the stock anyway. Of course if the front action screw is not tight there is potential for movement from three sources with that arrangement. Then again if the rifle has been shooting well why do anything other than to ensure the front screw is tight the barrel is truly free floating. | |||
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one of us |
Hi Mike, Good to hear from you. Spoke to Tony at Beretta and he basically told me retighten everything and to just leave it as it. Like Eagle27 says I'm reluctant to change anything as it does shoot so well but not when the barrel is touching the stock. The it shoots like s###. I got a 3 shot 4 inch group at 100m that was almost a perfect horizontal line. Problem is I don't think the existing arrangement will hold for the long term - not at this recoil level anyway. I don't think it has been out of the stock before (bought 2nd hand) the action screws were that tight. The plate has inletting so not that hard to align (assuming Sako got it right at the factory) but maybe the lug on the action is not square with the lug recess in the plate & it is torquing to one side. Which is probably why it ended up touching on the LHS of the barrel channel. The free floating of the wood is extremely generous already. So Mike you reckon glue the plate in the stock? Do you think you have to shoot it or just bump it on the ground on the butt a couple of times to get the lug to seat and then set aside - will that work? If I use araldite will a bit of heat on the plate allow me to pop it off in the future? Just in case. regards, JohnT | |||
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<Mike McGuire> |
John, You only need a bit of Araldite, just to retain the poition of the plate in relation to the action. As I said, you then bed the rifle normally as if the plate is now part of the action. When you pull the rifle apart the plate will stay behind because of the general grip around the recoil lug. But as to it lasting and recoil, it will be fine the way it is UNLESS the contact between the action stud and the recoil plate causes a problem. If that was to be the case then bedding things would make no difference. Basically, what you have there is the same principle as was used by early Sakos and Mausers with their cross bolt. In those cases the recoil lug of the action beared directly on the bolt and the cross bolt had the effect of tansferring forces to a bigger area of wood. In the case of the later Sakos their stud set up has an area that is too small for direct bearing against the wood...the recoil plate simply transfers the force to a large area of wood in the same way as the cross bolt did in earlier Sakos. As a side note, if you glue the plate on and bed...then before you glue just put some release agent on either part of the action bottom or the recoil plate so that the Araldite only stick in a small area. Actually, if it was my rifle I would leave some parts of plate without release agent so that the plate became a sort of semi glue in. Araldite left behind on the bottom of the action and top of the plate will nicely scrape of with a warmed up chisel. But I really think Eagle27 is correct, if it shoots leave it. I am quite confident that Sako will have a manufacturing system where the plate and action are aligned and the accuracy will satisfy most shooters. Those who it does not satisfy are rebarreling anyway and sticking a Rem 700 type lug in there. | ||
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Thanks Mike. Appreciate the advice. regards John | |||
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