The top action is a Savage target action. The bottom action is a Savage model 12 F-T/R action. Both have target triggers and have large shanks. What's the difference between them other than mounting bolt spacing? And, if that's the only difference, why would Savage do that?
Dave
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Sounds like you have all this figured out,why not start your own firearms manufacturing biz ? You make it sound so easy,I bet anyone can do it.Well there is the problem they are single shots! LOL
Only joking because milanuk hit it out of the park right away!
It does make one wonder how it is so many decades went by with the original design and how no one saw the obvious or cared to change it with a good many things relating to the Savage 110 action and what has come from it. Currently I would love to smack the crap out of Savage for all of the unneeded and counter productive variety they have that only serves to make after market stock selection and bottom metal confusing for the average Joe! On top of it some of it is just really poor engineering real Rube Goldberg stuff.
The single shots I cut them a lot of slack since that clearly was not a priority for them and it is clear that it was not. Most mass production oriented companies are terrible at doing low volume specialty/niche products.
Usually the budget is not there and often things are being done off the books and it shows later on when things take off like hot cakes on Sunday and obvious easy to foresee issues crop up.
It does call into question what the R&D and Engineering department have been like over the years? Having come from Aviation and Automotive some things catch me off-guard at times with some of the obvious over-sites by really small companies with very few manufacturing sites and small volume of total parts and models as compared to the complication one see's in automotive and aviation.
I have often wondered if firearm manufactures even maintain a fully time engineering staff that works every day or if they hire out engineering on an as needed basis? I am used to large scale design and manufacture were armies of engineer's, accounts, designers, laborers, skilled trades are on the clock everyday in many countries were production is always on going and non-stop since factories are global.
Obviously I am only seeing things from a consumer perspective!e I have a manufacturing background but it is not firearm manufacturing. It would be interesting to get the back story on how some of the industries more obvious mistakes not only come to be but why they go so long with out being fixed? It would make for some really interesting stories!
I've sent an email to Savage asking if they will redrill and tap it for me. Otherwise, I'll look for a local GS to do it for me.
Thank you for the responses,
Dave
I might suggest that you consider leaving the back hole where it is since it provides a much larger surface to bed
Well there is the problem they are single shots! LOL
Only joking because milanuk hit it out of the park right away!
It does make one wonder how it is so many decades went by with the original design and how no one saw the obvious or cared to change it with a good many things relating to the Savage 110 action and what has come from it. Currently I would love to smack the crap out of Savage for all of the unneeded and counter productive variety they have that only serves to make after market stock selection and bottom metal confusing for the average Joe! On top of it some of it is just really poor engineering real Rube Goldberg stuff.
The single shots I cut them a lot of slack since that clearly was not a priority for them and it is clear that it was not. Most mass production oriented companies are terrible at doing low volume specialty/niche products.
Usually the budget is not there and often things are being done off the books and it shows later on when things take off like hot cakes on Sunday and obvious easy to foresee issues crop up.
It does call into question what the R&D and Engineering department have been like over the years? Having come from Aviation and Automotive some things catch me off-guard at times with some of the obvious over-sites by really small companies with very few manufacturing sites and small volume of total parts and models as compared to the complication one see's in automotive and aviation.
I have often wondered if firearm manufactures even maintain a fully time engineering staff that works every day or if they hire out engineering on an as needed basis? I am used to large scale design and manufacture were armies of engineer's, accounts, designers, laborers, skilled trades are on the clock everyday in many countries were production is always on going and non-stop since factories are global.
Obviously I am only seeing things from a consumer perspective!e I have a manufacturing background but it is not firearm manufacturing. It would be interesting to get the back story on how some of the industries more obvious mistakes not only come to be but why they go so long with out being fixed? It would make for some really interesting stories!
Does that really even matter when you are bedding the entire bottom of the action?
My experience says 'No'...