Dusty Stevens
Shiner
Nothing that cant be fixed. Sucks youll have to pay again though.Hopefully better than it did. Or I just spent $550 on nothing and ruined my favorite rifle.
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Nothing that cant be fixed. Sucks youll have to pay again though.Hopefully better than it did. Or I just spent $550 on nothing and ruined my favorite rifle.
Can you post pictures of the barreled action after it’s been painted? I’m wondering if the bolt is painted. This could cause binding due to paint on cocking ramp. Also if your front action screw is a bit long the lug on the right side of the bolt will show scratches or dings from coming into contact with the action screw. Also the hole on the side by your lug abutments could have let paint into the lug abutments if it wasn’t plugged during the paint process. That could also have allowed paint or overspray into the chamber. Honestly the bedding job doesn’t look bad. It looks like they maintained contact points to the aluminum bedding and clearanced around those for bedding compound. I think the paint or overspray from it is your culprit.So I dropped my rifle off, a Rem 700 Sendero, a while ago to have the muzzle re-crowned and a bedding job completed. I knew the HS stock already had the aluminum blocks, but I wanted to squeeze as much accuracy as I could out of this gun.
Well I get it back and I notice that the action seems stiffer than normal. Like the lugs have been tightened. Which I know is not a thing. I asked the shop if they touched the action because it felt tighter, and they just said it feels that way because now it is torqued properly.
They talked me into threading the muzzle as I may put a can on it one day. Because of this, they said they repainted the barrel and action at no charge. I thought maybe some of the paint or bedding material got in the action.
Then once I get home I find that I cannot chamber some of the previous hand loads I made for it. Some now feel as if they are seated far too far into the lands.
I pull the stock and this is what it looks like. Does this look normal? It looks to my novice eye, that the action was not bedded, but only the portion forward of the recoil lug. Any advice would be great.
Well, now I really want to see how this thing shoots.
That was for the bedding and the cut, crown and thread of the barrel.WOW!! $550! I'm not charging near enough!!
ReloadsYou can thread the muzzle with the receiver attached. I don't do it though. It appears that the rear tang and the front ring and recoil lug area. Are you trying to chamber new or reload rounds?
I believe I would start with new brass.Reloads
I stick by my previous statement. I would have done it all for under $200That was for the bedding and the cut, crown and thread of the barrel.
I stick by my previous statement. I would have done it all for under $200
#1) WHO DID THE WORK? There are bad gunsmiths out there, just like auto mechanics.So I dropped my rifle off, a Rem 700 Sendero, a while ago to have the muzzle re-crowned and a bedding job completed. I knew the HS stock already had the aluminum blocks, but I wanted to squeeze as much accuracy as I could out of this gun.
Other than a holiday or two around the tang- please be specific- picture number, and area of concern- that justify calling it "amateurish".This example is not satisfactory and the "bedding" job is amateurish. WH
Other than a holiday or two around the tang- please be specific- picture number, and area of concern- that justify calling it "amateurish".
It ain't perfect in appearance, but there's NO WAY to know whether the receiver was correctly stress-free bedded from pictures. No way, no how.
Yeah, five bills is far too much. OP agreed to pay for it- now someone else says to dispute the bill because they think it's too much? You gotta be effing kidding me.
Anyone here that's bedded more than a handful of rifles has had one come out less than "perfectly purty" aesthetically. Sanctimonious to say otherwise, it ain't so.
I care as much about appearance as anyone. But "less than perfect" is no reason to trash a job- and I don't see anything in those pictures that's deserving of calling it a hack job. But, I'm not one of those guys that spends hours shining his brass until I can shave in the reflection 'cause I think it'll somehow make the ammo shoot better.
Could be a poor bedding job. Could be perfectly stress-free. Put the rifle in a vise, an indicator on the barrel.
Let the indicator tell you which one it is.
JMO. Flame suit on.