Last edited by foxx; 01-10-2015 at 11:21 AM.
Not being a gunsmith, I was wondering while reading this thread, would something like a guiters Truss rod be useful? Seems it might allow for adjustments which (once again Im not a smith) could help with stringing shots due to how the stock is pulling. Just a thought.
I've had phenomenal success with Elmer's glue and wet spaghetti noodles.
:-/
I'd spare myself the grief and just spend the $100 on a Boyd's, and use it as a baseline for "farting around" with.
I have a Remington (pardon my profanity) that I tried removing the pressure point and filling the voids in the stock with automotive fiberglass Bondo in the forearm, and expanding foam and axle bolts from my old Massey Ferguson tractor in the hollow of the buttstock. No lie this time. How's that for farting around? Lol. Here's what all that accomplished:
1. Forearm flex was reduced noticeably.
2. The stock had better balance and more heft, causing recoil to be tamed significantly. It is a .30-06.
3. The stock had better balance and, did I mention, more HEFT? (remember those axle bolts?)
4. It went from a barely sub-MOA rifle to a 1 1/2 MOA rifle. Apparently cheap Remingtons like the pressure point.
5. I no longer really use it due to the psychological trauma induced by all of the above. Lots of fruitless "farting around".
I'd suggest buying the Boyd's.
;-))
That seems quite similar to what I did with the allthread rod. Behold! A diagram:
The process went something like this:
- Drill lengthwise through bulkheads high enough to allow a hex nut to turn.
- Push allthread (gray) through the holes, threading it through hex nuts (yellow) in each of the second-from-the-end chambers (red).
- Seal and fill end chambers (blue) with 4:1 epoxy mixed with 30% chopped glass fibers.
- After blue chambers cure, tighten nuts against the bulkheads as shown.
- Fill all intermediate chambers with 4:1 epoxy mixed with 50% microballoons.
- Proceed with secondary stiffening operations.
- Realize nothing was learned from this experiment because more than one variable changed.
This helped A LOT. I used some aluminum tube and 90 minute epoxy.
This took me down to sub MOA with consistency.
The problem I had before doing this was when I would properly load the bipod, the stock would flex and touch the barrel on the right hand edge near the front.
I eventually got a boyds. It took me a crap ton of work to get the boyds to shoot as well as my modified tupperware.
I had floating issues and problems in the action area as well.
I had to shim the action under the rear action screw.
I have a feeling it will improve after it is bedded.
Right now, it is mostly a sub moa rifle.
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