Oof.I have watched thier videos on this.
This is the kind of BS that passes for engineering in today’s manufacturing sector..
You’re not talking about Accuracy International I would hope?
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Oof.I have watched thier videos on this.
This is the kind of BS that passes for engineering in today’s manufacturing sector..
I do not think anyone in this thread has mentioned a barrel but.Pretty sure you need to think inch pounds, foot pounds is way way too much and can/will damage barrel nuts. Speaking of the nuts they are generally pretty thin pieces of metal and I think anything past 60 inch pounds is getting into the point damage may occur.
Oops my bad I just took it for granted, still it is inch pounds not foot pounds.I do not think anyone in this thread has mentioned a barrel but.
Sorry but 40, 60, 100ft-lbs on properOops my bad I just took it for granted, still it is inch pounds not foot pounds.
You need more than just a barrel seated against the action, you also need proper thread engagement and you can't get that with simply hand tight. Without good, intimate thread engagement, you'll never get good, repeatable harmonics moving from barrel to action and back, and your groups will show it.I am having a barrel spun up for me with a wrench flat on the end to tighten. I was thinking of just having them do away with the wrench flat and screw on hand tight. Does this affect accuracy?
75 inch pounds is not even 7 foot pounds. Think about that.Pretty sure you need to think inch pounds, foot pounds is way way too much and can/will damage barrel nuts. Speaking of the nuts they are generally pretty thin pieces of metal and I think anything past 60 inch pounds is getting into the point damage may occur.
The problem arises when shooters lack understanding of exactly how a threaded joint works.You need more than just a barrel seated against the action, you also need proper thread engagement and you can't get that with simply hand tight. Without good, intimate thread engagement, you'll never get good, repeatable harmonics moving from barrel to action and back, and your groups will show it.
I am talking about anybody that tells you two small set screws are sufficient in properly securing a threaded joint where the purpose is to allow zero movement between the mating surfaces.Oof.
You’re not talking about Accuracy International I would hope?
Jackie answered your question. He said Anybody.So Curtis/terminus not AI
He said he watched their videos and I was trying to clarify who “they” wereJackie answered your question. He said Anybody.
The Accuracy International System is much more than two set screws binding against the thread tenon.Accuracy international is the exception to the rifle rule of torque. That's due to the sheer clamping force and load the quickloc puts on a barrel.
Hand tight is fine but a extra/additional force is need to clamp the barrel from movement during the actual firing processes that produces the harmonic vibrations in the barrel
Stands to reason that, absent a specified substance, one must assume "dry".On my Savage which is a switch barrel I have found 40 ft.lbs. to work fine.
Remembering that I have some anti seize on the threads this 40# translates to different numbers with different substances applied to the threads. There are published lists for torque reductions when using different substances. The reduction amounts are quite surprising. (minus 50% with some).
What I have found difficult is to get a manufacturers torque value that states the value given is either 'dry' or with a particular substance.
ARP in the automotive world has no problem providing it and it is of course with their product.