anyone try the MatchGrade Synthetic Stock Stabilizer to stiffen up stock?
http://www.ballisticstudies.com/shop...lizer+Kit.html
seems like a good idea wonder if filling the butt end with this stuff would help it too?
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anyone try the MatchGrade Synthetic Stock Stabilizer to stiffen up stock?
http://www.ballisticstudies.com/shop...lizer+Kit.html
seems like a good idea wonder if filling the butt end with this stuff would help it too?
OK, fully bedding the stock up to the front. Doable. I have even wrapped the barrel in 2 layers of masking tape, and than polishing it with Johnsons paste wax. Makes a real pretty bedding job.
Personally, I would think if you're going for stiff, than the carbon fiber arrows bedded in the front of the stock to be a good solution. I prefer bedding for the action end of the stock.
Larry
Tinkerer
I have filled stocks with epoxy to stiffen them up so I can use a bi-pod without the forearm hitting the barrel. It worked just fine and is probably about the same thing as this kit :)
did you epoxy sticks in the wrist too?
Nope. But I did not use the plastic stock. Its pretty tough stuff and I would not think to stiffen the wrist. But I have heard of wood stocks shearing off there, so I good bolt/stiffener is a good thing. I have had 1 Striker stock try to shear off, reinforced it with a 3" wood screw and a aluminum pillar.
Larry
Tinkerer
I've never had a rifle stock that I felt needed reinforcement to the wrist, but I understand its a concern with the axis stocks
I wonder if they include chopped fiberglass or any other "reinforcement" in that "epoxy kit"? Anyone should know that resin by itself is pretty useless structurally. "Composite" has only enough resin to bond the fibers of the re-enforcement together. A good example is those fiberglass marker poles we get to mark road edges or the driveway for winter plowing.
I forgot to mention it earlier, but I typically mix mine with microballons or silica when filling in forearms. I have also mixed in lead shot with the epoxy to add some weight. All variations seemed to work very well in the half dozen or so that I have done over the years.