I went through the “Farley Scare“, as I had three. The first two were very early circa ‘97 the third one was made in the early 2000’s.
In short, several shooters had Farley’s that the lugs just came off, and not as a result from any kind of over pressure.
Jim used S-7 Tool Steel for his bolts. This is a great choice as long as you adhere to the VERY stringent heat treating protocols required in achieving the exact mechanical properties you desire.
Jim was wanting 44 RC. However, some bolts came out with as high as 53+. He simply got careless in the tempering.
There was a recall. The idea was you send the bolt back, he would redraw the temper to the lower level if needed.
I had access to a RC hardness tester at Loan Star Heat Treating, so their lab man test mine, Pat Byrnes’, and Gene Bukys’. All were at 46 RC and below except one of mine. It was my favorite LV action. It these at 51.
I had to decide if I was going to send it back and get stuck in “Farley Time” and never see it again in a year, or live with it.
Since I had already fired thousands of rounds through it, with no I’ll affects, I decided to have the lugs magnafluxed for any fractures. It had none, so I decided to just shoot it. 20 years later it is still my favorite action in LV, and I lost count of the number of rounds i have put through it years ago. I even converted it to a drop port.
My other vintage Farley is the action on my 30BR VFS Rifle, which if I remember checked at 46RC.
Here is the RC mark left on my LV from 20+ years ago.
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