I have read this thread today and I am surprised that most of you do not know how epoxy works. When we first started using our epoxy, we had the epoxy engineers come down and see what we were doing. One thing they told us was that Epoxy is designed to be used as THIN as possible to get best adhesion. We showed them how people dremel the bottom of action or cut in cross marks. The engineers told us this is actually not as good as doing nothing, That when the glue is thicker it is actually not as strong as if it was thinner. Therefore if you are using a dremel or cross cuts you are actually making the epoxy not as strong. We were told this in the middle 80's and we still use same epoxy. Now the thinner might be good for type of epoxy we use, I am not sure about other types of systems gunsmiths are using, but the only actions I have seen come unglued we built, were rifles we shipped to Europe and they came apart in the airplane cargo hold, probably due to cold temps, plus they were round stainless Grizzlys, not the original aluminum actions we build.
I have seen many Panda actions that have come unglued, most during shooting and many were dremeled or cross cut on bottom or not using our type of epoxy. That is why we do not do as Jerry does on our Panda action. Our glue ins last ten years plus with out coming out as the dremeled or cross cut actions we have seen over the years, some were less than a year old. Just what I have seen over the last 33 years of building actions and rifles.
Jim