Raythemanroe
Bullet Whisperer
I see some actions that look stout enough to take 200-500# of force without a little warpage.. I wouldn't be paying anyone to find out what they can take.
Ray
Ray
It's been my experience with a good finish on the shoulder of the barrel and action when it stops it stops. I torque at 70LB for center fire and the amount of turn from stop to 70 LB is about zero.Do you guys think turning a barrel 1/8 - 1/4 turn past stop is stressing the threads and receiver?
I'm always seeking ways to make a long range precision rifle more precise and I have much respect for members of this site. A lot of tricks go into a precision build and barrel torque comes up often. Although I'm a scientist at heart, I seem to have arrived at my torque values from interviewing gunsmiths and shooters who have won 1000 yard national championships and from the experiences of my competition rifle's shooters. I've also studied the memoirs of precision rifle builders since the 1970s and queried receiver makers for their recommendations. Of all the various information I've considered , 40-50 ft/lbs is the most commonly used answer and I usually torque at 40 ft/lbs unless there is a reason why not (e.g. customer specification).
I like the idea mentioned here of cycling the threads back and forth to torque and will try that on my next build. It will become part of my build process if it reduces group size or F-Class scores. My suspicion is that its intrinsic value is far below the weakest link in the precision chain but I don't believe it can hurt so I'll try it. I really like the idea of locking those threads together perfectly and it might just help 100 yard groups get into those lower .0s.
Last week I did a build on my first Pierce Tungsten receiver and called them for their recommendation. I was concerned about galling with a stainless R-416 barrel torqued in the tungsten receiver with 18 TPI. They recommended 70 ft/lbs of torque with copper-based anti-seize and that is exactly what I will use for this build. I suspect that 40 ft/lbs will likely deliver identical precision but 70 is still quite reasonable to me so I'll use it.
Aside from that, it has been my experience that if a barrel rotates 1/8 turn after shoulder contact, the barrel is turning in the barrel vice. I detect very little if any barrel rotation when I hit 40 ft/lbs of torque. It may be compressing the threads internally a bit but not much.
Its for mountain rifles- less recoil than those pesky featherweightsWhen did John come out with a tungsten receiver? I have 2 rifles built with John's receivers, one in CM and the other is Ti.
Either Mike’s definition of extreme high torque is 40-70 pounds or he’s doing garbage machine work and parts and trying to compensate for the extreme low quality of the machine work. If 40-70 pounds won’t keep the barrel to action joint from moving its too sloppy. Undersized tennon or out of alignment action face to threaded joint. The more I learn the more I understand that there’s a lot of quaks in the shooting industry selling snake oil to ignorant buyers. I have no idea who Mike at Tac Ops is but the buzzword name sounds alarm bells to me and tells me all I need to know.On another website, I read a comment by Mike from Tac Ops that one of the things they do to maintain consistency in cold bore shots is "extreme high torque" on the receiver to barrel fit.
He didn't give a number but I don't think 40-70 pounds would be his definition of extreme.Either Mike’s definition of extreme high torque is 40-70 pounds or he’s doing garbage machine work and parts and trying to compensate for the extreme low quality of the machine work. If 40-70 pounds won’t keep the barrel to action joint from moving its too sloppy. Undersized tennon or out of alignment action face to threaded joint. The more I learn the more I understand that there’s a lot of quaks in the shooting industry selling snake oil to ignorant buyers. I have no idea who Mike at Tac Ops is but the buzzword name sounds alarm bells to me and tells me all I need to know.
Put a witness mark before torquing. Pencil works fine. Last R700 barrel I might have gotten 1/64 of a turn more before the barrel started slipping. Was aiming for 50 ft lbs. Headspace did tighten a slight amount (guessing 0.001"). Just another anecdote for the file...snip...
Aside from that, it has been my experience that if a barrel rotates 1/8 turn after shoulder contact, the barrel is turning in the barrel vice. I detect very little if any barrel rotation when I hit 40 ft/lbs of torque. It may be compressing the threads internally a bit but not much.