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Who glass beds their .22 rimfire rifles, is it necessary?

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22 October 2012, 10:38
lal
Who glass beds their .22 rimfire rifles, is it necessary?
My rifles barrel I free floated but am thinking of bedding the action? What you think?
Thanks
22 October 2012, 12:20
Westpac
Crowns, bedding, triggers... .22 rimfires suffer the same issues as the big guns and thus stand to benefit from the same treatments. Folks who demand the most from any firearm will treat them all as equals.


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This is my rifle, there are many like it but this one is mine. My rifle is my best friend, it is my life.
22 October 2012, 16:08
p dog shooter
If you have one that is giving you trouble go ahead.

I never have recoil forces on a 22 is no where near a center fire so a lot less movement of the action during recoil.

That said if I hand a 22 that was a loose fit in the stock ect I would glass bed it.
22 October 2012, 21:00
loud-n-boomer
You will find that most of the top small-bore shooters have their rifles glass-bedded, if that is any indication.


One morning I shot an elephant in my pajamas. How he got into my pajamas I'll never know. - Groucho Marx
22 October 2012, 22:53
Westpac
quote:
Originally posted by p dog shooter:
I never have recoil forces on a 22 is no where near a center fire so a lot less movement of the action during recoil.



Bedding isn't about recoil forces. It's about providing uniform support for the action, which ALL guns benefit from having.

If a shooter want's his .22 rifle to be the best that it can be, then that would require no less an effort than one would put into any center fire. In fact it becomes even more critical since they cannot hand load for their particular rifle. Serious .22 lr shooters go to the extreme of weighing all their ammo and placing them in groups by weight. It all boils down to what the shooter wants from his rifle and how far he is willing to go to achieve it.


_______________________________________________________________________________
This is my rifle, there are many like it but this one is mine. My rifle is my best friend, it is my life.
22 October 2012, 23:50
Snowwolfe
Before getting into Cooper rifles I bedded all our .22 bolts and the results were very impressive. Most noteable were the Remington 581's. They would go from 3/4 inch 5 shot groups at 50 yards to 3/8's with the same ammo.


My biggest fear is when I die my wife will sell my guns for what I told her they cost.
23 October 2012, 04:42
J.D.Steele
What Westpac said, and plenty of it.
Regards, Joe


__________________________
You can lead a human to logic but you can't make him think.
NRA Life since 1976. God bless America!
30 October 2012, 07:18
majestrate98
quote:
Originally posted by Westpac:
Folks who demand the most from any firearm will treat them all as equals.


Treat them all as equals? Could it be that the .22 was discriminated against due to it being a rimfire when the proper bedding was distributed amongst the guns? Surely the guns with the most accuracy should give their fair share to the lowly .22s as they were not provided the same opportunity to achieve the same level of accuracy. Makes one wonder if the .22 can ever be equal with the centerfire calibers ...
dancing


Sneak close, aim small, hit hard!
** NRA Lifetime Member **
30 October 2012, 07:51
p dog shooter
quote:
Bedding isn't about recoil forces. It's about providing uniform support for the action, which ALL guns benefit from having.


Bedding is all about recoil with out recoil the action well not move and one would not have to bed it. If a action moves around with out recoil then it is way loose in the stock.

Good uniform bedding stops the recoil from moving the action in the stock. Action movement allows point of bullet impact to shift.