If I'm understanding you correctly, I am not talking about truing the inside of the action (raceway area) but the top of the action where the scope base sits.are you talking about putting the receiver on a mandrel through the bolt raceway and cylindrical grinding?
No i'm talking about putting the receiver on a tightfitting mandrel that slides in the raceway and then putting it on a cylindrical grinder or surface grinder and grinding the OD of the receiver true to the ID of the raceway. That will be expensive, in fact Id say that by the time you take that action and have it traditionally trued, then cylindrically grind the OD you will have far exceeded the cost of a custom action that is already true.
Lots of people have lathes or blueprinting tooling so traditional trueing is not that expensive. But what your wanting to do requires specialized tooling to do a good job that most gunsmiths dont have. Yes I know you could do it with a lathe either with a tool or toolpost grinder or on a mill in a dividing head but it would not look as good and would require a lot of setup.
You could have the scope base holes opened up to 8-40 When doing this you could adjust the screw position if they are not in the correct place or spaced incorrectly. As far as reprofiling the exterior of the action( I can only assume the reason is to match the scope base), there are better ways to achieve this. It is common to bed the scope base to the action similar to the way an action is bedded to the stock. After bedding the base can be attached solidly and without stressIf I'm understanding you correctly, I am not talking about truing the inside of the action (raceway area) but the top of the action where the scope base sits.
Hahaha yep, someone gave me a bunch of military Mausers with bad pitting, did it on my mill with a dividing head on a mandrel to clean them up and remove the stripper clip hump. Just did one after the other one afternoon so I didn’t mind the setup work. Surface finish was rough but a after a little shoeshine with Emory cloth and a blast and park they cleaned up. A friend did this on some Katrina flood guns that had sentimental value in his lathe with a tpg , said they cleaned up ok and that he noticed out of roundness that was removed. Was there any Benicia other than cosmetic? Probably notTrying to justify this work even at free
If I'm understanding you correctly, I am not talking about truing the inside of the action (raceway area) but the top of the action where the scope base sits.
Yes. But don’t just bed the rear. Bed all mating surfaces of the rail in front and rear.Thanks for the replys. I do bed the rear of my scope bases.
I was curious if it could be done, it seems like the easiest option is to align the base holes and bed the base.
What's the best way to go about bedding the front? When I bed the rear I apply epoxy under the rear of the base and tighten the two front base screws.Yes. But don’t just bed the rear. Bed all mating surfaces of the rail in front and rear.
Yes, no different.Is it the same process for the front, or should I start over?
Same process. I apply release agent on the receiver, then bedding to front and rear of base. Place all 4 screws in the base and carefully “start” all 4 screws with a couple threads before fully lowering the base onto the receiver (not tightening any screws yet). Then tighten the front screws down with about 10 in.lbs so they are nice and tight, but not fully torqued. Then turn in the rear screws until the heads just touch and match up with the countersink holes on the base. This allows the rear to float, but ensures perfect screw alignment as the bedding cures.What's the best way to go about bedding the front? When I bed the rear I apply epoxy under the rear of the base and tighten the two front base screws.
Is it the same process for the front, or should I start over?