Wouldn't the barrel tenon hold the case And keep it from expanding, just like a steel action? MattGrade 5 titanium has a youngs modulus around 16.5 ksi, whereas 416 sits at 30 ksi. So titanium is almost twice as stretchy. I'm interested in how that plays out on bolt thrust though. My thought was that the brass seals to the chamber and is largely self supporting, putting minimal force on the bolt. If that is true, then a titanium action wouldn't really let the brass grow more because the forces are so low.
No, I have never heard of a barrel loosening due to a ti action. I have built on quite a few and have no issues.I hear a lot of conjecture here. I have a friend who has a custom hunting rifle built on a Remington titanium action. He has had it for a number of years, and shot it a lot, with no problems at all. It is his favorite, go to rifle. I admit to skimming. Did someone who posted say that he actually has such an action and experienced the problem?
Barrel tenon will certainly support the case. Assuming a CTE of 16, the expansion of that 0.473 hole would be to 0.4737 across 100 degrees. Not a problem at all as we all know. The 1.06 tenon would grow to 1.062 across the same 100 degrees. The titanium receiver (CTE 9) grows from 1.060 to 1.061. A perfect thread fit becomes tight by 0.001, in this case. Not much, but perhaps in some weird corner case, over a greater temp range, and large number of cycles, could strain the titanium enough.Wouldn't the barrel tenon hold the case And keep it from expanding, just like a steel action? Matt
I have heard of this. I have also heard the different twist barrel could unscrew from the action. I have also heard that left-twist barrel shoot better in the northern hemisphere. I am gonna put all these in the "herd dat" list. That list is much longer than the "seen dat" list.I hear a lot of conjecture here.
Grade 5 titanium has a youngs modulus around 16.5 ksi, whereas 416 sits at 30 ksi. So titanium is almost twice as stretchy. I'm interested in how that plays out on bolt thrust though. My thought was that the brass seals to the chamber and is largely self supporting, putting minimal force on the bolt. If that is true, then a titanium action wouldn't really let the brass grow more because the forces are so low.
Here’s a little more....I hear a lot of conjecture here.
I hear a lot of conjecture here. I have a friend who has a custom hunting rifle built on a Remington titanium action. He has had it for a number of years, and shot it a lot, with no problems at all. It is his favorite, go to rifle. I admit to skimming. Did someone who posted say that he actually has such an action and experienced the problem?
Yes. Several mentioned actually seeing this problem. I called Jim Borden and Stiller. Both of them told me they no longer will make an action from Titanium. Im sure many people use them with great success but for me the steel just makes more sense.
My 2nd BR rifle had a Ti receiver with a steel bolt, that was built much like a Hall. Never had a barrel come loose, however I did have one Hell-of-a-time with the bolt getting stuck in the back of the receiver. Several Posters have mentioned the "sticky" nature of Ti. It sure is. If that bolt wasn't put in dead-nuts straight . . . whammo! Stuck! And it took a bunch of swearing, tapping, and yanking to remove it. Certainly not the best way to start a BR Match.After going through several such episodes, I sold the rifle.
Chris Mitchell
That’s weird..that’s all I run on my tr rifles and haven’t had one come loose yet... but I will keep that excuse in my why I didn’t shoot good boxI was speaking with a reputable gun builder recently and was told something interesting. They do not like using titanium actions because they have seen barrels come loose despite being installed to proper torque specs. Apparently steel and titanium have different stretch when being fired and after a while the barrel isn't threaded tight into the action... Has anyone else ever heard of this issue?
Thanks
The silver is a high temp anti-seize. The high temp variety of aircraft nuts are plated with silver and are good to 800F, the low temp nuts were cadmium plated then dipped in a Moly based dry film and good to 450F.
The "good" stuff is silver, but you don't buy it from autozone!Never seize sold at places like AutoZone is very fine nickel particles not silver.