I have a model 10 .243 standard barrel with the black stock,and accu trigger.The fore end touches the barrel on the left side about halfway up.Will this affect the accuracy?It has the rounded fore end.I thought about buying a new stock for it.Are the Boyd wood stocks a good choice?I don't want to spend a fortune on one.
Thanks Jeff
It groups pretty good a 100 yards.Around a inch,sometimes better.Will the barrel be floated in a Boyds stock?
Thanks Jeff
Yes,the boyds are relieved enough. I just bought one of the thumbholes and with shipping it came to 125.00 It is a drop in ,but should have pillars or at least bedded.
Willing to give back for what the sport has done for me!
You can open up the barrel channel on your stock.
Retired sniper. You can run, But you will only die tired!!!
You can use sandpaper wrapped around a dowel to keep things round, and elbow grease it til it clears the high spot. Boyds stocks are good for the money, and all the factory contours I have bought them for have been floated fine. They are a good upgrade for factory plastic. i have used them plain with decent results, but like most sub $400 stocks they do benefit from bedding.
Last edited by Werewolf; 07-22-2012 at 10:31 AM.
Having the barrel free floated means it is not touching the stock anywhere. That is what you need to shoot for right now. If your accuracy is not to your liking you can try bedding your rifle. Bedding is using epoxy and sometimes pillars to provide a solid stable foundation for your action which helps improve repeatability (=accuracy). You can use the search function here or google stress free pillar bedding.
Ok,thanks.
Jeff
Good advice here Jeff.
Also check if tang is floated.
"An armed society is a polite society"
"...shall not be infringed" What's the confusion?
i found out that on a lot of the synthetic stocks the recoil lug is touching the ribbing in the bottom of the stock not allowing the action to fully seat on the pillar. i ground this area out to make plenty of room for the recoil lug and when the actions is torqued to 35lbs on the front action screw and 25lbs on the rear actiion screw the barrel will sit in the channel without touching either side of the stock.
I think I would bed the lug at this point seeing how rough the recoil lug seat is.
Devildog pointed out a common problem not many are aware of. Clearing out that piece, put the action back in the stock, bump the butt on the floor to make sure the recoil lug is sitting on the stock and torque the screws and check to see if your barrel is free floated as well as the tang. If not, sand out the barrel channel and the tang area until the barrel and tang are free. And yes, Boyds are great stocks for little money.
El Lobo
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