Gunsmithing Large Shank vs. Small Shank Savage actions

Re: Large Shank vs. Small Shank Savage actions

I've built three rifles on Savages that I fully blueprinted the action like a rem 700 , dialed in on the bolt raceway and recut the threads , I opened them up to the large shank dimensions , I tried the bolt heads front , back and face so they are all square

I also threaded them with a shoulder (like remmy) to do away with the nut

all rifles shot as good as any rem 700 I've ever seen
 
Re: Large Shank vs. Small Shank Savage actions

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: JJones75</div><div class="ubbcode-body">I've built three rifles on Savages that I fully blueprinted the action like a rem 700 , dialed in on the bolt raceway and recut the threads , I opened them up to the large shank dimensions , I tried the bolt heads front , back and face so they are all square</div></div>

How'd you hold the bolt head while truing it?


We don't true Savage bolts because of the bolt head design.
 
Re: Large Shank vs. Small Shank Savage actions

A good number of folks have built 338 Edges on standard/small shank long actions, I haven't read of anything getting blowed up real good yet.

Also, the very first WSMs Savage made were on standard/small shank shot actions before they switched them to large shank actions.
 
Re: Large Shank vs. Small Shank Savage actions

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Keith Johns</div><div class="ubbcode-body">
How'd you hold the bolt head while truing it?
We don't true Savage bolts because of the bolt head design. </div></div>

I use a piece of old barrel shank , drilled an tapped a 10-32 hole thought he side about 1/2" back from the face , bore it (barrel bore) out so that the bolt head shank will just barely fit in their even a little tapping with a plastic hammer would be fine.
Cut a light taper on the barrel shank (so you will be able to get a parting tool behind the bolt head), push the shank back so that you leave about 1/8" stickin out and snug down the set screw. The bolt head is now running true to the bolt race way well the hole in the bolt anyway
I used a parting tool to cut the back of the bolt lugs rather than grind a tool to fit , i just clocked the tool post a little so i was only cutting with right hand corner of the blade , put a little magic marker on the back of the lugs and take light passes till their cleaned up then do the front lugs and bolt face just like you do a remington.

I thought about it for a while and honestly think that a collet would work the same because the cuts are all made with the head in the same position so that will all be true to one another , but i use the barrel shank cause i have terrible OCD and know that collets have some run out and if the gun dident shoot i'd be bat shit crazy thinking that was the cause
NOTE: the bolt heads and pretty damn hard!! harder than any other i've ever cut

One of the guys i built was a "338 WSM" when Nosler made the 180g Balistic tips for 338 as a light weight compact deer and hog gun for a guy , we were able to get 3000+fps out of a 20" barrel so i know the pressure were pretty damn high as it flattened primers on new brass with the first loading , the guy currently shoots 200g Accubonds at 2900+fps and have never had any issues , we measured the action with a mic before and afer about 400 rounds with zero increase in OD
 
Re: Large Shank vs. Small Shank Savage actions

When you made the cuts, did it seem as though the face and rear of lugs were pretty parallel/true to one another already?
I figured they would be. And with the floating bolt head design saw no benefit to messing with it.

Thanks for the info. Hadn't heard of anyone truing a Savage bolt head yet! Do you see any reason to do it again?(true the head)


Howd the receiver lugs and face seem? If you already had a large shank, would you open it up even further? There's not a ton of meat left there to begin with..


Im building a 338LM right now on a Savage that I didn't true. Tenon is 1.115x20(edited)
Doesnt leave a ton of shoulder but it leaves enough. Lug fits snug around the tenon and the action screws on with NO slop. Its tighter than I make Remingtons. I'll post more pics in our pics/reviews thread once it's done.
 
Re: Large Shank vs. Small Shank Savage actions

338LM...
photo-360.jpg

photo-361.jpg
 
Re: Large Shank vs. Small Shank Savage actions

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Keith Johns</div><div class="ubbcode-body">
Im building a 338LM right now on a Savage that I didn't true. Tenon is 1.15x20
Doesnt leave a ton of shoulder but it leaves enough. I'll post pics in our pics/reviews thread. </div></div>

That gun started life as a 338LM and you are just re-barreling it? Or was it a Large Shank Long action?
 
Re: Large Shank vs. Small Shank Savage actions

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Keith Johns</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Customer wanted it barreled like a Remy.
Im not sure Id agree to barrel a Savage with the nut. People would be taking it apart just so they could headspace it themselves and chit. </div></div>

From a business standpoint I can see your point. But from a mechanical/gunsmith point do you feel that the floating bolt head and barrel nut go hand in hand?
 
Re: Large Shank vs. Small Shank Savage actions

Whoops I meant 1.115"
Not much shoulder I know. Next time I might use a 1.350" cylinder barrel and turn it down to 1.315"

This one(above) was left at 1.240"


EDITED....

<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: 762frmafr</div><div class="ubbcode-body"> from a mechanical/gunsmith point do you feel that the floating bolt head and barrel nut go hand in hand? </div></div>

Im not sure, but no not really.
I can see how the barrel nut <span style="font-weight: bold">isn't</span> as straight as a shoulder cut between centers sandwiching a precision ground recoil lug. So maybe the floating bolt head is trying to help make up for a barrel/chamber that might not be as straight as possible. But I think the lugs would get pushed back against the receiver abutments and the face would be muscled where the lugs wanted it to go. So I don't see how the floating bolt head makes up for much except a crooked raceway.
With the floating bolt head design, the raceway can be a little crooked from everything in front of and including the lugs. As long as the lugs and face are good(true), the raceway could be a little off and it wouldn't matter. I don't know how much though.