Hi All,
I've got three rifles to bed for best extreme long range accuracy. An experienced gunsmith buddy of mine recently told me that he strongly feels that only the recoil lug area of the action needs bedding on modern, aluminum chassis stocks like the Bell & Carlson Medalist line. I've seen no videos on YouTube that show that but it makes some sense to me, particularly if your bedding scheme is to stop any possible movement of the action within the stock by filling any pesky voids while retaining the original dimensions once torqued up.
I know I'm screwed up somewhere but can't see exactly where. Enlighten me please.
Viper1
I've got three rifles to bed for best extreme long range accuracy. An experienced gunsmith buddy of mine recently told me that he strongly feels that only the recoil lug area of the action needs bedding on modern, aluminum chassis stocks like the Bell & Carlson Medalist line. I've seen no videos on YouTube that show that but it makes some sense to me, particularly if your bedding scheme is to stop any possible movement of the action within the stock by filling any pesky voids while retaining the original dimensions once torqued up.
I know I'm screwed up somewhere but can't see exactly where. Enlighten me please.
Viper1