I have been toying with the idea of a plastic stocked rifle for a while but it must not have any unsightly gaps etc. People suggest a 'no inlet version' for my gunsmith to inlet and bed himself. Alternatively I could send the barreled action in the white to McMillan to bed.
Any comments?
People expect too much from so-called "drop-in" synthetic stocks. All too often, someone will send for a stock and expect it to fit their barreled action perfectly as soon as they screw the metal to the stock, but things seldom work out that way.
If you want to get the most out of a McMillan stock, send your finished metalwork (complete) to McMillan and have them custom-fit a stock for you. They do the best installation/pillar-bedding job in the industry, and several leading custom riflemakers actually have McMillan perform the stock installation procedure for them - McMillan's that good.
I currently have a half-dozen custom hunting rifles in my battery which wear McMillan stocks that were installed, bedded (with machined aluminum pillars), and finished by McMillan. Inletting and finish is perfect, without exception, and nonoe of those rifles have ever changed its point of impact.
AD
P.S. NEVER NEVER cut on a glass stock with any power tool such as a dremel or even a barrel channel rasp without wearing breathing protection from the glass dust! & do it it a well venilated area! Gunsmiths don't grow old being careless.
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NRA Life member
[This message has been edited by Bear Claw (edited 11-21-2001).]
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Ray Atkinson
The Rimrocks are cheap compared to the fancy wood handles you like!
Jason
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Ray Atkinson