To answer the OP question ,no I don't like the guy's set up . As far as the debate of truing an action especially a Rem 700 how true is true ? And to what tolerance also what is acceptable ? Truing a Rem 700 is a rabbit hole .
Difficult to make 10# (Hunter Class) weight with a sleeved action. You are thinking group or VFS rifles which can go to 13.5 #.
Whole other thing? How? You are contending that truing can cause more problems than it fixes. This is not my experience. You are basing your conclusions on a limited number of anecdotal evidence. There are heaps of records of thousands of Registered Benchrest match results that can verify what I have seen and gleaned from talking with the pioneers (old timers) in BR comp through my 20 years of competition. I am talking true aggregate accuracy -25 record shots fired in a single day of competition through variable conditions- A huge data base.
I can agree with this. A 700 action that has been trued will not benefit - and probably make matters worse without other accurizing steps like as you said a tighter fitting bolt. Along with trigger work, firing pin mods, bolt timing, etc. all mimicking standard details found on custom actions.So many other factors in play here other than action work. Like hundreds of factors.
And I still say there is lot more to these being a "modification" than the average "trueing" being offered by most smiths.
I can agree with this. A 700 action that has been trued will not benefit - and probably make matters worse without other accurizing steps like as you said a tighter fitting bolt. Along with trigger work, firing pin mods, bolt timing, etc. all mimicking standard details found on custom actions.
With all due respect, your experience must be somewhat limited. Let me give you a specific example. A friend put a couple of best grade barrels from excellent manufacturers on a a short action Remington, and it would not shoot to the standard of his other rifles. The bedding was correct, and his load workup procedure had given excellent results for other rifles. Finally after setting the barrel back and trying another they checked the action by turning a false tenon and shoulder with a close fit, and with that in the lathe, screwed the action on. Even though he had squared the front of the action on a tight mandrel, the threads were so cocked that when the action touched the shoulder of the false tenon on one side, light was showing on the other. The threads had to be opened .025 to get them to clean up. Originally he had taken advice such as yours. After the work was done, and the barrel set back, because of the increase in thread diameter, the rifle shot just as it should have in the first place. The truing was done by setting the action up in a fixture using a tight fitting mandrel. The threads were single pointed, lug seats cleaned up, bolt face touched up along with the backs and fronts of the lugs and the bolt nose. The work made all the difference in the world in how well and how consistently the rifle shot. So there you have it, a published account of a legitimate before and after test using the same barrel.I challenge anyone to show that a "trued" Rem 700 receiver (unless it is a TOTAL basket case) actually shoots better. Maybe lap the lugs if they are horrible. If not, leave it.
I think trueing can cause more problems than it fixes.
Of course, there are always the obligatory responses that it must shoot better. No one has ever done a comparison or before and after test and published it. Of course, that "would be a waste of time" right? Trueing is a waste of time from my experience. I talk customers out of it all the time. No one has ever came back and said it didnt shoot and I trued it and now its fixed. Not one.
Would you let us know where the info is located?Difficult to make 10# (Hunter Class) weight with a sleeved action. You are thinking group or VFS rifles which can go to 13.5 #.
Whole other thing? How? You are contending that truing can cause more problems than it fixes. This is not my experience. You are basing your conclusions on a limited number of anecdotal evidence. There are heaps of records of thousands of Registered Benchrest match results that can verify what I have seen and gleaned from talking with the pioneers (old timers) in BR comp through my 20 years of competition. I am talking true aggregate accuracy -25 record shots fired in a single day of competition through variable conditions- A huge data base.
InternationalBenchrestShooters.com-Results- Currently only goes back to 2012, long after custom actions were allowed in Hunter and Varmint Hunter ( ~1999). The venues that contain Hunter Class results will be found in Maine, Pa., Md. and several clubs in the South.Would you let us know where the info is located?
The point is to make the rifle shoot better, and I have seen that outcome.When you attempt to “true” an action, you first have to determine what surfaces you’ll use to “true” the action to (the datums your going to be measuring from). In order to do that you have to first determine the true form of these datums and few if any gunsmiths have the tools, and fewer have the skills to establish these datums. If they did, they could make a lot more money as metrology techs or toolmakers. And this is the biggest problem I have with “truing”. It may be better but most likely is isn’t. And if you start cutting surfaces on a heat-treated and prestressed steel, there’s as much likelihood that the part will warp after you cut it “true” anyway. So what’s the point?