P
pazsint
Guest
I have 2 NIB or near new Rem 541-s factory originals. I only want keep shooting one and sell the other. They are both known to shoot very well, but are not consistent. My goal is to pick one to shoot say 1/2" groups at 100 yards, BUT not glass bed, pillar, nor add the 2nd screw or modify rifle in any permanent way other than the adjust the trigger...at least NOT UNTIL I decide on the one I'll keep, so the other can be sold as factory. Neither rifle had a barrel pressure pad in the stock near the tip, and both actions are quite sloppy in the stock and both barrels tend to touch the stock on one side or the other.
So far I've had little lasting success using shims cut from plastic lids like margerine tubs and pringle cans. I'm using a Leupold 24 x scope, sand bags, target type ammos, and shoot only with very little wind. Many times I've had 3 or 4 shots in a row group at 3/8" or less only to have next several shots scatter and enlarge group up to 2". Once I fired 3 shots in 0.167", then the next day it wouldn't even cut an inch. I've been shimming the action at the receiver and just ahead of the trigger. I've found that additional thinner plastic also placed on one side of the action removed more slop, and lined up barrel in channel so as not to touch sides. I've been using a 3/8" square pad under the barrel near the forearm tip, although I've also tried this shim at several different points along the barrel all the way back to the receiver usually with out success. I tighten the single action screw firmly where it will go in without any bind.
?? SO..> What am I missing here ? Are these plastics not stable and do they squirm or squash and allow bedding to change ? Am I not putting the right size under barrel ? How do you determine what thickness to make the barrel shim ? Should the barrel get much upward pressure ? Should this barrel shim be hard or soft ? What have you used that worked in this situation ? Is there another way to pin down action with glass bedding ? At this point any ideas are appreciated.
Dan
So far I've had little lasting success using shims cut from plastic lids like margerine tubs and pringle cans. I'm using a Leupold 24 x scope, sand bags, target type ammos, and shoot only with very little wind. Many times I've had 3 or 4 shots in a row group at 3/8" or less only to have next several shots scatter and enlarge group up to 2". Once I fired 3 shots in 0.167", then the next day it wouldn't even cut an inch. I've been shimming the action at the receiver and just ahead of the trigger. I've found that additional thinner plastic also placed on one side of the action removed more slop, and lined up barrel in channel so as not to touch sides. I've been using a 3/8" square pad under the barrel near the forearm tip, although I've also tried this shim at several different points along the barrel all the way back to the receiver usually with out success. I tighten the single action screw firmly where it will go in without any bind.
?? SO..> What am I missing here ? Are these plastics not stable and do they squirm or squash and allow bedding to change ? Am I not putting the right size under barrel ? How do you determine what thickness to make the barrel shim ? Should the barrel get much upward pressure ? Should this barrel shim be hard or soft ? What have you used that worked in this situation ? Is there another way to pin down action with glass bedding ? At this point any ideas are appreciated.
Dan