Interesting observations
@Barelstroker ! IIRC the Howa 1500/Weatherby Vanguard inlet was giving us all sorts of issues for the longest time and we couldn't rely on the consistency of the main underside flat on those actions to reliably bed the action on (without additional bedding compound). That is when we decided to rather use the underside of the front recoil lug and underside of the rear tang as they were a lot more consistent. As you have seen though, the downside is that your action has the ability to translate within the chassis prior to you tightening it down, which we try to mitigate by keeping the side walls of the inletting at a tight tolerance. If your barrel is closer to one side than the other, that is fairly normal, however if it is very offset (> 0.040") then that could be another issue all together.
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Josh
Thanks for the reply Josh.
The 1st time I mounted the action in the chassis, I had the chassis in the upright position as 308 pirate advised. That's when I realized that the action would not consistently or naturally centre.
With the chassis still upright, I centred the barrel in the barrel channel & tightened the action bolts, alternating between the two, front 1st a little then the rear & so on.
When I took the rifle out for the 1st shots off a sturdy bench, it would recoil harshly & jump 4 to 5 inches to the left on every shot.
When I inspected the action lug recoil face & corresponding chassis face, both showed significant markings on the left sides with very light markings on the right.
I do realize that it must be very difficult as you said, to try to keep tolerances workable in this situation. I immediately recognized why MDT had used the bottom of the action recoil lug & not the belly of the action.
I ended up very carefully filing some of the cerakote off the left side of the chassis face. I'm not sure whether the action is out or the chassis but, since doing this, the action now mates parallel with the chassis &, the rifle performs unbelievably better. There is still a slight jump to the left but, this may be rifling induced torque.
I've pulled it apart again & have added 0.008" of shim between the action & chassis faces to see if that helps with taking alignment. If the rifle settles down, I'll replace the shim with some bedding compound between the faces & call it good.
Otherwise, I'm very happy with the chassis. It's a definite significant step up from the old style stocks in every way.
Regards Barelstroker.