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Hoss50

Glass Bedding Stocks?

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How hard is it, and do you have any advice or recommendations?

I was going to have a gunsmith do it, but I have probably 3-4 rifles I want to get bedded and that seems like a pretty expensive proposition to have them all bedded. So therefore I was thinking about tackling them myself, but have never done it. 

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Not hard If you just bed the area around the lug it's pretty straight forward.  Find a throw away stock for one of your rifles and do a practice run. That way no pressure on the first one.  Use good release agent, be sure the action sits level in the stock, and do not create a mechanical lock between stock and action. Devcon plastisteel works good.  Lots of options for bedding compound tho.

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Pretty easy. I've done 4 Savages that included a Bell and Carlson stock with an aluminum block, Boyds wood, and one higher-end Savage tupperware.

I used blue painters tape for the recoil lug and stock edges and Play-Doh to fill in everything I didn't want compound getting into but it dries out if you are doing the project beyond a days work, modeling clay is better. 

Devcon 10110 is the best compound, especially $-wise for 4 stocks.

I really liked using several layers of Hornady One Shot as a release agent. No mess or fuss.

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I used action screws covered in red bearing grease and gently set them to 15 lbs.

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Food for thought and especially if you don't have a smooth barrel nut, even a small amount of compound in a ridge of the nut (or anywhere) will lock the action to the stock. Fill any nut ridges or edges on the action not facing down with Play-Doh/clay. Triple check before you marry the action/stock and clean out any overflowing compound immediately with qtips, etc.

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In addition to roughing everything up with a dremel on any stock, I drilled some shallow holes in my plastic stock project and it worked really well for me.

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A good stock probably doesn't need bedding, though it is a comfort to most people to know they did everything they could to make their rifle as accurate as possible.  I hear McMillan now tells people NOT to bed their stocks ... if I recall correctly.  But if you do bed it, I'd pillar it as well.  Bedding without pillaring never made a whole lot of sense to me.  

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