Horizontal spread is about 1/2", vertical spread about 2.5". Bolts are tight. What went wrong? What do I do to correct this?
Check if the barrel and stock is moving when losing and tigthening the action bolts. It�s easy to feel even a very small movement if you hold one hand around the forend and barrel when loosing the action bolts.
Carefully inspect the bedding and look for any small pease of loose bedding compound or any other object that mabye have got in betveen the bedding and the action. If you notise movment when losing and tigthening the bolts and don�t find anything suspect in the bedding area a rebedding is unfortenally the solution.
If there isn�t any movment I would suggest removing the bedding under the barrel.
Veritical groups is often a result if the barrel isn�t cylindrical and the bedding extend out under the barrel.
Another possible problem could be if the locking lugs have bad contact. Check this if everything else seemes allrigth.
Hope you keep up with my staggering spelling
Stefan in a really plesant and sunny Sweden
There is movement when I loosen the front bolt: the tip of the barrel moves up about 3 or 4 mm. Rebedding is the solution? Just so I don't make the same mistake again, what did I do wrong? I just put the action into the bedding (acraglas) and secured with rubber bands over the top. Do I need to tighten the front bolt more while the bedding is setting up?
Thanks for the help. Dutch.
Vertical stringing can be due to barrel vibration. Try a different load to get a different barrel time, so the bullet exits at the top or bottom of the swing.
Don
You used the right method with the rubber bands, but something has gone wrong. (I also wrap the barrel just inside the forend with enough tape to support it at the proper clearance all the way around as I bed the action in place with the rubber bands.)
From the way the barrel moves it sure sounds as if the action is under stress. I suspect the wood is crushing under the force of the screws.
Did you bed the action all the way back to the tang? Is there any chance that you have crushed the wood under the bedding at the tang?
If you tighten the front bolt first do you see movement at the tang (or barrel) when you tighten the rear bolt? If so I would suggest a pillar around the rear bolt. Any suitable piece of steel tubing (as in a Mauser) is enough to keep the wood from compressing again there. The tube should fit perfectly betwen the tang and the trigger guard. Rough up the outside of the tube with 80 grit or a file, and completely degrease it before rebedding. I would also suggest that you use a piece of oiled tape on the bottom of the recoil lug when you bed it. When the tape is removed you will have a slight clearance under the recoil lug.
A pillar for the front is a tougher problem. Does that model have the slanted front bolt? I've never bedded one like that, but if the wood is crushing due to the forces of the front bolt it could again explain the problem you are seeing.
I would try to cut a pillar that matched the receiver and bed it into place there as well. Sorry I can't be more specific.
Please let us all here know how it goes.
Don
Don, this is the model with the slanted front screw. The tang does not move when I loosen the front screw, just the barrel tip. Something is bending where it shouldn't. I did bed the rear of the action in a separate step (the front is actually my third attempt, and I am ready to ........) For now, I'm going to assume I am not compressing the wood enough to matter. This is a laminated stock, and I am not torqueing down that hard (don't have a torque screwdriver, so I can't be more specific).
I'll see where things are bearing tonight, and go from there. Thanks for all the help.
When you sucked up the rubber bands it pulls down in that area and the rest of the action and barrel lift, then when you tighten the action it puts an uplift on the barrel and its bouncing off the glass in the barrel channel...
If you must ust the rubber bands then use them only on the rear reciever ring then everything settles and works off the tang...
------------------
Ray Atkinson
I doubt very seriously if any "rubber band" could warp the action. Maybe an industrial bungee wound in place by Superman could.
Good luck,
Don
An example can be found in the bedding procedure used for Service rifles, such as the M14 and M1 Garand. In this procedure, a special fixture is used to hold the trigger guard open at a specified distance. When the bedding is cured, trimmed, and ready to go, the trigger guard is fully closed. On a properly bedded service rifle, the clamping force used to close the action should be considerable.
With a bolt action, as Don recommended, I'd do the whole thing at once. Then, instead of using the rubber bands, secure the rifle in the stock with headless screws for the initial bedding. After using LOTS of release agent (those who have been reading my posts for a while, should be grinning about now) especially on the screws, and covering well the outside overflow areas with masking tape, apply the compound, then squeeze the action and stock together by hand, with the headless screws in place. Let it cure, then proceed with the trimming and final seating.
Insofar as the stock is a laminate, it might be moisture RESISTANT, but not moisture PROOF. I have had no luck making pressure points, so I avoid them. Instead, I bed the recoil lug, chamber area, tang if needed, and the first 2 inches of the barrel channel, at the chamber end.
I once made a "poor man's" pillar bed using the following method: Measure carefully the outer diameter of the forward stock screw head. Subtract about .002 from that. Carefully enlarge the hole for the screw to that diameter, all the way to the action, leaving the wood rough.
On the inside of the stock, cut a small chamfer--not too deep. Install the action, using a headless screw, and GREASE THE SCREW WELL. Now, pack the hole around the screw with Acraglas, or Steel-Bed, from Brownells. Ensure that you use plenty of release agent, and mask the bottom of the stock well. Gently squeeze the stock together, and remove all of the excess.
Now comes the fun part.
You must wait about one and one-half to two hours to let the mixture kick over. Then remove the headless screw GENTLY. (You did grease it well, didn't you?) Immediately replace is with your well oiled action screw, and tighten LOOSELY.
If done right, you will have a pillar of Acraglas that you can tighten your screw onto, without fear of crushing the stock.
All of this was just a suggestion--I readily admit that a much more durable job can be done with aluminum or steel pillars by someone set up to do it properly.
But, I've always been the type to stick my hands into stuff, for better or worse.
(Still looking for the release agent, by the way...........
------------------
Happiness is a 200 yard bughole.
The point is I don't want uneven pressure from anywhere...I use guide screws and push the barreled action in by hand firmly and let it settle on its own..
Right or wrong it works for me.
------------------
Ray Atkinson
Here is what I think happened. I used tape to center the barrel in the barrel channel, and establish the depth, near the tip of the forearm. Then, I let the action settle on the area previously bedded at the rear bolt and the tang, and put the bands on the front and rear receiver rings. So, there was nothing supporting the action in the middle, and about 20 to 40 lbs bearing down. All that with a 2 ft span between supports. You bet that'll bend things! Like Homer says: "Doh!".
Thanks again, to all. Learned something again! Dutch.
1) Bed only the tang and front of action. If the action is like a Ruger or Wby Mark V with front screw right at front of action, then about an inch or so under the barrel, but with none under barrel for M70 or Rem 700.
2) I like to position the free floating barreled action initially with tape around the barrel but with a very quick setting filler, like car body filler, just behind the tape. I then pull apart when set and reove tape.
3) Have things so barreled action just rests on car body filler at thre forend tip and also the tang.
4) Drop in barreled action with screws with out heads on them. I usually put a steel bar through the scope rings to balance the barreled action or sometimes just the scope itself.
I strongly belive there sghould be no screw pressure or rubber bands etc. and that the action should float between tang and front.
The problem with rubber bands etc. is that they can cause the barreled action to continue moving at the epoxy is curing.
Mike
I hand bed the action to start with so that it lays centered in the rifle stock, then I use a small piece of modling clay UNDER the barrel to locate the front of the barrel at the forend tip at 50% depth...the barrled action touches at two spots, the end of the tang and on the clay....At this point I glass the first two inches of barrel at the action, the recoil area back to and including the tang...I use the headless guide screws as Mike mentions, push it down and it will settle shortly and come to rest...When cured and removed I slightly drill out the screw holes and clean it up....
If I want the barrel channal bedded fully I do it at the same time...If I want it fully bedded and free floated I put two layers of paper tape from the front of the chamber to the end of the barrel...when the tape is removed your barrel is free floated and the stock is full lenth glassed...
Stresses in the stock are problem causes, bedded by hand or glassed, the result is the same, inaccuracy.
------------------
Ray Atkinson
P.S. Ray, I really like your way of bedding/floating the barrel. A couple of layers of tape would be a very quick way to bed exactly as far as you want to, and float the rest of the way.
[This message has been edited by Dutch (edited 06-22-2001).]
I use a quick setting filler to position the barrel becuase I have found with tape that you can get some creep as the epoxy cures. Often the tape is positioning the barrel by binding on the sides of the stock and not just sitting on the bottom of the forend channel.
Also it is much easier if you do a few rifles, especially if the beddding is done sometime after you have set up the stock for bedding.
Actually, the absolute best bedding job is to do the action with no barrel on, but that is not real practical with normal sporting barrel contour stocks.
Mike
[This message has been edited by Mike375 (edited 06-24-2001).]
------------------
Ray Atkinson
Thanks again for all the help. I've printed it out, and am going to study some on it. After all, NEVER give up. . Dutch.
Have you checked the contact on the locking lugs? This "two group behaviour" could well be a result of bad contact in the locking area.
Blacken the lugs with a match or a candle. The put the bolt in the action and close it with pressure FORWARD on the handle. Then jerk the bolt in the closed position a few times, but only a few degrees! Then apply forward pressure again and open the bolt. This will tell you how the lugs contact the reciver. If you make a full turn on the bolt a small high spot can give the impression that you have a pretty good locking area.
Hope you understand this strange instuctions that I typed in a forgein language, at least it is for me
Stefan.
Now, your rifle is shifting in the stock from shot to shot..You must locate that movement or stress. Try using shims under the the action on the recoil lug or tang or both...get it shooting and then bed accordingly...
Better solution: Send the gun to Jim Brockman and tell him not to send it back until it shoots...Gooding, Id. 208-934-5050
------------------
Ray Atkinson
Still, that's kinda like giving up isn't it? Dutch.