05 August 2008, 07:06
ACRecurvebondo in a synthetic stock?
I have a Savage 308 Win with the hollow synthetic stock and am wanting to add some weight to the stock. I'm considering filling the butt and the barrel channel with Bondo. Is there a chance the Bondo will harm the sythetic stock in some way? Other suggestions? This rifle is my Jeep gun and I don't wanna spend a lot of $$ on it. Thanks.
05 August 2008, 07:17
ramrod340depending on the stocks material there is a good chance the bondo might not stick.
I have not used bondo on a synthetic but often when using epoxy on synthetics you have to cut holes groves etc to allow the epoxy to form a mechanical bond.
05 August 2008, 07:24
MarkBondo cracks rather easily. To add weight you can mix either lead shot or BB's with epoxy to get something that is both stronger and heavier.
05 August 2008, 10:04
kududeI did this in the barrel channel as bedding, and it was not very successful (read failure). It "stuck" but it was not a "good" thing. I did epoxy some metal strips into the magazine well, and they "stuck", therefore, you could epoxy lead shot which I think might be the better way.
I epoxied metal strips into the hollow butt which added to the rigidity of the stock with the strips in the well. In the butt, if you used BB's instead of lead, you might be able to pour more into the grip area of the stock and reinforce it without adding too much weight. Kudude
05 August 2008, 20:04
Rick R+1 on the epoxy and lead shot.
Just be prepared to deal with a substance that pours like a very heavy thick liquid and plan accordingly. (and to be amused by the single bb's that get loose and go off on their own leaving a snail trail of epoxy)
05 August 2008, 23:25
tiggertatequote:
Originally posted by Rick R:
+1 on the epoxy and lead shot.
Just be prepared to deal with a substance that pours like a very heavy thick liquid and plan accordingly. (and to be amused by the single bb's that get loose and go off on their own leaving a snail trail of epoxy)
Yeah, and don't be surprised to findone or a few stuck to the shop floor the next morning. Little buggers get everywhere.