Dgd6mm said:Just get rid of the Remington, and go with a Savage, you owe it to yourself....oh boy I know i'm fixing to get trampled.... ;D
MrMajestic said:Tim, I use Vee blocks with lead and rosin in a 25 ton press. A rear entry action wrench with a long pipe takes care of the rotational force. Haven't needed heat or marked a barrel, YET ???
Two trips to the gun shop an you have the tools to do it yourself . And the proper tool for installing it. When you hold the action and tighten the nut. that is the proper way. Holding the barrel and tighten the nut is not the correct way. LarryTC260 said:Y'all making this hard on yourselves. I take the barreled action to my smith and let him yank the factory tube. $25 and done. I figure he's got the heavy duty tools and expertise to get it off without damaging anything then I can fool with the aftermarket barrels myself from there after.
If you hold the action rather then the barrel when you tighten the nut the head space increases.GrocMax said:If using a headspace gauge while tightening the nut, I find putting a shim of plastic like bag plastic, about .004"-.006" thick on the bolt face helps. The barrel tends to tighten a scootch when the nut bears down and you get friction on the nut/lug junction and the 'bagplastigage' gets it right most of the time where gauge only tends to set headspace short a thou or two.
TC260 said:Y'all making this hard on yourselves. I take the barreled action to my smith and let him yank the factory tube. $25 and done. I figure he's got the heavy duty tools and expertise to get it off without damaging anything then I can fool with the aftermarket barrels myself from there after.
savagedasher said:Two trips to the gun shop an you have the tools to do it yourself . And the proper tool for installing it. When you hold the action and tighten the nut. that is the proper way. Holding the barrel and tighten the nut is not the correct way. LarryTC260 said:Y'all making this hard on yourselves. I take the barreled action to my smith and let him yank the factory tube. $25 and done. I figure he's got the heavy duty tools and expertise to get it off without damaging anything then I can fool with the aftermarket barrels myself from there after.
+1TC260 said:savagedasher said:Two trips to the gun shop an you have the tools to do it yourself . And the proper tool for installing it. When you hold the action and tighten the nut. that is the proper way. Holding the barrel and tighten the nut is not the correct way. LarryTC260 said:Y'all making this hard on yourselves. I take the barreled action to my smith and let him yank the factory tube. $25 and done. I figure he's got the heavy duty tools and expertise to get it off without damaging anything then I can fool with the aftermarket barrels myself from there after.
Rereading my post I don't see anything mentioning that I don't have an action wrench or that I'm trying to hold the barrel and tighten the nut. That's because I do have an action wrench and I'm not trying to hold the barrel and tighten the nut
.
The point was, the factory barrel only has to be removed once and to me, $25 is cheap insurance to ensure the initial removal goes smoothly. One damaged action can pay for a lot of removals. I'm not saying you or anybody else can't remove factory installed barrels successfully yourselves. I'm quite certain you can. Just pointing out that before shadetree gunsmiths reach for the blowtorch there's an easy and inexpensive alternative.