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That video is....awful....out comes the rasps and chisels.


Well this is a fine pickle we're in, should'a listened to Joe McCarthy and George Orwell I guess.
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Originally Posted by Gibby
All my Remington 700's (wood stocks) shoot better with a forend pressure point. Once I find out the proper point pressure that the gun likes, I place a piece of Teflon thread tape between the pressure point and the barrel.


Are the actions properly bedded?

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I’m dumber after reading this thread. Just wow.

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Originally Posted by mathman
Originally Posted by Gibby
All my Remington 700's (wood stocks) shoot better with a forend pressure point. Once I find out the proper point pressure that the gun likes, I place a piece of Teflon thread tape between the pressure point and the barrel.


Are the actions properly bedded?

Of course they are. Geeze mathman. Ha!


Gun Shows are almost as comical as boat ramps in the Spring.
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Originally Posted by pathfinder76
That receiver is bolted to essentially an unmovable platform. Something has to give. You wouldn’t see that with a shoulder fired rifle me thinks.
You'd be wrong.

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Originally Posted by BangPop
Originally Posted by pathfinder76
That receiver is bolted to essentially an unmovable platform. Something has to give. You wouldn’t see that with a shoulder fired rifle me thinks.
You'd be wrong.

How? This is the same bloody reason a lead sled cracks stocks.

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Originally Posted by pathfinder76
Originally Posted by BangPop
Originally Posted by pathfinder76
That receiver is bolted to essentially an unmovable platform. Something has to give. You wouldn’t see that with a shoulder fired rifle me thinks.
You'd be wrong.

How? This is the same bloody reason a lead sled cracks stocks.

No it's not. The rig in the clip allows for recoil to move things to the rear. The lead sled opposes that.

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Originally Posted by Gibby
Originally Posted by mathman
Originally Posted by Gibby
All my Remington 700's (wood stocks) shoot better with a forend pressure point. Once I find out the proper point pressure that the gun likes, I place a piece of Teflon thread tape between the pressure point and the barrel.


Are the actions properly bedded?

Of course they are. Geeze mathman. Ha!

I've found my bedded 700s to perform extremely well free floated, so that's why I asked.

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Originally Posted by mathman
Originally Posted by pathfinder76
Originally Posted by BangPop
Originally Posted by pathfinder76
That receiver is bolted to essentially an unmovable platform. Something has to give. You wouldn’t see that with a shoulder fired rifle me thinks.
You'd be wrong.

How? This is the same bloody reason a lead sled cracks stocks.

No it's not. The rig in the clip allows for recoil to move things to the rear. The lead sled opposes that.

That thing has one option. It had no give laterally or vertically.

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Originally Posted by pathfinder76
Originally Posted by mathman
Originally Posted by pathfinder76
Originally Posted by BangPop
Originally Posted by pathfinder76
That receiver is bolted to essentially an unmovable platform. Something has to give. You wouldn’t see that with a shoulder fired rifle me thinks.
You'd be wrong.

How? This is the same bloody reason a lead sled cracks stocks.

No it's not. The rig in the clip allows for recoil to move things to the rear. The lead sled opposes that.

That thing has one option. It had no give laterally or vertically.

Which is different than the lead sled, which restricts the backwards inline motion.

IC B3

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Originally Posted by mathman
Originally Posted by pathfinder76
Originally Posted by mathman
Originally Posted by pathfinder76
Originally Posted by BangPop
Originally Posted by pathfinder76
That receiver is bolted to essentially an unmovable platform. Something has to give. You wouldn’t see that with a shoulder fired rifle me thinks.
You'd be wrong.

How? This is the same bloody reason a lead sled cracks stocks.

No it's not. The rig in the clip allows for recoil to move things to the rear. The lead sled opposes that.

That thing has one option. It had no give laterally or vertically.

Which is different than the lead sled, which restricts the backwards inline motion.

I understand that.

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