karsten cheek piece slipage

thefiremeister

Sergeant
Full Member
Minuteman
Nov 7, 2009
258
11
68
Nevada
Not sure if this is the right place or not but here goes.

I just put a laminate wood stock on a Savage 10FP in 308 . the stock is to low so I put a Karsten cheek piece on it to get my eye up to the scope and get a decent cheek weld.


Only problem is, the cheek piece moves after a few shots. I've got the knobs cranked down pretty tight but it keeps slipping down under recoil. I tried to slip some foam under it but apparently the foam I have isn't stiff enough to keep it one spot.

Any body else using one have this problem? Any ideas on how to keep the cheek piece from moving?
 
Re: karsten cheek piece slipage

Take a look at he length of bolts & tightening knobs, are they bottoming out at all?

In the Photo Gallery I have some pics showing my new'ish rifle (Savage 10 FLCP-K) with the kydex cheek riser I made (I've made all my own risers) the nice thing is if you make your own set it for your correct height and drill it for that, you'll never have a slippage issue!
 
Re: karsten cheek piece slippage

I have checked the bolts and every thing is sucked down to the stock.

I was hoping to keep the cheek piece adjustable. I suppose I could run a couple of grabbers in to it but I'd prefer not to .

I think that bolt handle you have will be next on my list of things to get
 
Re: karsten cheek piece slippage

I wasn't worried so much about leaving mine adjustable, so I screwed in 4 small black screws in the corners. Looks really good, and I don't have to worry about slipping!!

The less I have to worry about things... the better I like it!!

DK
 
Re: karsten cheek piece slippage

The one I bought from him a year ago was supplied with some foam and instructions on applying it. I installed it on a 77/22 with a laminated stock. The foam did help with the slippage issue.
 
Re: karsten cheek piece slippage

I liked the sexwax idea and I had thought about screws but didn't want to resort to that just yet.

I had thought the rubber on the inside would be the easiest thing to try first but finding a thin piece of rubber or gasket material around here is impossible. believe me I tried.

The proverbial light bulb went off at work yesterday when I thought of using a bicycle inter-tube. I just got one cut up and made some little 1 1/4 inch rubber washers.

Small, Light weight, soft and grippy and best of all friggin cheap.

It should work but I probable won't get to shoot until Monday. I'll let you know if it works, well not if it works but how well it works.