Alex Wheeler
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Some thoughts...
We are not even coming close to loading the threads on a barrel joint. You cant compare this to other clamping applications like in a engine. I used to drag race, build engines and was a mechanic for 15 years. I was into that stuff just like Im into rifles now and tried to learn everything I could. In an engine a fastener is used for clamping. Ideally you measure the fasteners stretch, if you can get to both sides like you can on a rod bolt. The rod does not know if it is a bolt or a stud/nut, so long as that fastener is stretched to spec. On a head the best way to torque by degrees since you cant measure stretch in a blind hole. The reason studs are liked on heads is it guides the head on and normally they are finer threads with better finishes than the block so torque ratings are more accurate/consistent. Not to mention they gui⁷ed the heads on nice and you dont tear up gaskets fighting that heavy pos
. The threads in the block do not know if there is a nut or a head on the top of the fastener. None of that applies to rifles.
I have experimented with this area of rifle accuracy. Like most things, I assume there can be improvements made. I twisted my bed to cut .0003-.0005 of taper in the tenons. I did this for years. I tried many types of lube. Many torque values. My conclusion after trying all this stuff is that theres nothing there. The standard thread joint we use on quality actions is not moving. We would not be able to shoot zeros if there was any movement, and a .270 puts the same load on the joint as a 6br if run to equal pressure.
Trust me, I wish there was something here. Because then we could fix it and shoot smaller.
We are not even coming close to loading the threads on a barrel joint. You cant compare this to other clamping applications like in a engine. I used to drag race, build engines and was a mechanic for 15 years. I was into that stuff just like Im into rifles now and tried to learn everything I could. In an engine a fastener is used for clamping. Ideally you measure the fasteners stretch, if you can get to both sides like you can on a rod bolt. The rod does not know if it is a bolt or a stud/nut, so long as that fastener is stretched to spec. On a head the best way to torque by degrees since you cant measure stretch in a blind hole. The reason studs are liked on heads is it guides the head on and normally they are finer threads with better finishes than the block so torque ratings are more accurate/consistent. Not to mention they gui⁷ed the heads on nice and you dont tear up gaskets fighting that heavy pos

I have experimented with this area of rifle accuracy. Like most things, I assume there can be improvements made. I twisted my bed to cut .0003-.0005 of taper in the tenons. I did this for years. I tried many types of lube. Many torque values. My conclusion after trying all this stuff is that theres nothing there. The standard thread joint we use on quality actions is not moving. We would not be able to shoot zeros if there was any movement, and a .270 puts the same load on the joint as a 6br if run to equal pressure.
Trust me, I wish there was something here. Because then we could fix it and shoot smaller.
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