Nope. Bedding over the tops of the pillars makes a big difference in longevity.Al
Does your bedding change much on glass stocks?
Hal
Al, skimming over the top, or digging it out and starting over?Nope. Bedding over the tops of the pillars makes a big difference in longevity.
I watched the same video, I noticed right away no bedding over the pillars.Just watched this video () from winning in the wind. He seems to think you should re-bed your rifle ever 6-12 months. Does anyone here re-bed this frequently? Makes me wonder if getting a professional bedding job isn't worth if if it's only good for a year.
Terry, I provide a minimum of .050 of bedding material over the top of the pillars when I bed it initially. I'll use as much as .125" of thickness over the pillars at times.Al, skimming over the top, or digging it out and starting over?
Thank you!Terry, I provide a minimum of .050 of bedding material over the top of the pillars when I bed it initially. I'll use as much as .125" of thickness over the pillars at times.
I reduce the O.D. of the top of the pillar down about 1/8"-3/16" of the length to allow the epoxy to flow down and lock on to the upper part of the pillar. I believe this helps to stabilize the thickness of bedding over the top of the pillar. If the pillar diameter is smaller than I'd ideally like it to be to do this reduction, I'll enlarge the top of the pillar hole in the stock to accomplish the same thing. Or split the difference a bit on both.
On a bolt-in gun, this method has proven to give an extremely long life span to the bedding job. The only thing that will compromise it's life span is the bedding material itself deteriorating (that's why using a quality compound is critical), issues with the stock itself (failing core fill material) or the bedding getting beat up by people being less than careful when taking the barrelled action in and out...including not seating the recoil lug properly.
Good shootin'-Al
Everyone blames that .050" layer of bedding. Never the 1"-1.25" of wood or composite under the bedding. In a composite stock theres a lot of epoxy. And its a much cheaper epoxy than we use for bedding. Just take some dial indicators to the range. You will be suprised at how much your stock moves when the sun hits one side of it. Its actually enough to change how it tracks. With wood, it never stops moving with humidity. So is it the bedding that moved or the stock? I have measured pretty large movements in stocks due to temp changes. Far bigger than bedding could move. This is why I like glue and screw jobs. The contact between the stock and action doesnt change.
Man, I never even thought about the sun warming up a rifle and changing the bedding, but that makes a lot of sense. Ill never leave it out in the sun on the line again,Everyone blames that .050" layer of bedding. Never the 1"-1.25" of wood or composite under the bedding. In a composite stock theres a lot of epoxy. And its a much cheaper epoxy than we use for bedding. Just take some dial indicators to the range. You will be suprised at how much your stock moves when the sun hits one side of it. Its actually enough to change how it tracks. With wood, it never stops moving with humidity. So is it the bedding that moved or the stock? I have measured pretty large movements in stocks due to temp changes. Far bigger than bedding could move. This is why I like glue and screw jobs. The contact between the stock and action doesnt change.
Dude. Sometimes I don't like you very much because you always bring up things I've never considered.Everyone blames that .050" layer of bedding. Never the 1"-1.25" of wood or composite under the bedding. In a composite stock theres a lot of epoxy. And its a much cheaper epoxy than we use for bedding. Just take some dial indicators to the range. You will be suprised at how much your stock moves when the sun hits one side of it. Its actually enough to change how it tracks. With wood, it never stops moving with humidity. So is it the bedding that moved or the stock? I have measured pretty large movements in stocks due to temp changes. Far bigger than bedding could move. This is why I like glue and screw jobs. The contact between the stock and action doesnt change.