IMO, a thick recoil lug is of no advantage in terms of accuracy. As for pinning, the receiver has to be drilled according to how the lug is. I like two pins as it keeps the lug from rotating if there is clearance between the lug and the journal on which it fits.If a competition stock is properly bedded, is a heavy recoil lug needed?
And how is the lug pinned?
Never, but I have seen wood break there. Which brings up a big factor...With good bedding and the action screws torqued, the lug is far from taking ALL of the force from recoil.Has anyone ever seen a bent one from recoil. Or can one give and spring back? Seems highly unlikely.
If you had a bunch of recoil lugs of different thicknesses and a surface grinder at work could you head space buy varying the thickness of the recoil lug till you got the head space right?
I cant agree with that, pinning is excellent. I locate, drill, and ream 3/32 holes to accept Borden blind hole lugs. Jim's lugs fit so well you almost cant take them off by hand. Swap a barrel and the lug does not move, saves your bedding job. I cant think of how a pinned lug could cause a problem?
I agree with Alex here.I cant agree with that, pinning is excellent. I locate, drill, and ream 3/32 holes to accept Borden blind hole lugs. Jim's lugs fit so well you almost cant take them off by hand. Swap a barrel and the lug does not move, saves your bedding job. I cant think of how a pinned lug could cause a problem?
I used to grind factory lugs. Then i realized how much it cost me to keep up a surface grinder and how much real estate it took up not to mention having to refinish the lugs after grinding so now i just buy new lugs.
...but if the action screws were ever loose. I still doubt it would bend it but at least it's feasible like that.I have seen Remington factory lugs bent on 338, 375, 416, 458. All these calibers have excessive recoil. The lugs surely didn't bend from we exposure to the sun shine.
And it works great!If you had a bunch of recoil lugs of different thicknesses and a surface grinder at work could you head space buy varying the thickness of the recoil lug till you got the head space right?
The problem is that changing the lug thickness affects headspace, clearance from bolt nose to bottom of counterbore, clearance from front of lugs to end of barrel tenon and potentially, case protrusion. Those dimensions are critical design dimensions that affect what happens in the event of a case separation and proper case support.And it works great!
The problem is that changing the lug thickness affects headspace, clearance from bolt nose to bottom of counterbore, clearance from front of lugs to end of barrel tenon and potentially, case protrusion. Those dimensions are critical design dimensions that affect what happens in the event of a case separation and proper case support.
I won't say it can't be done but it does compromise an otherwise very good safety design feature of a Remington. It works great until it doesn't.![]()
Yes and no. Savage has the baffle to handle separated cases and resultant pressure/debris and has less unsupported case.Changing lug thickness would be the same concept of a savage barrel, would it not?