I'll get some pics of the finished item up shortly.
I got to looking at the work I needed to do to fit my 453 varmint into a Boyd's Tacticool and decided it was the perfect chance to do my first bedding job on a cheap stock. Fitting a 453 into the Boyds stock that is inletted for a 452 requires a fair amount of material be removed. The 453 set trigger assembly is effectively a rail mounted on the bottom of the receiver that needs to be allowed for.
Got the stock from Boyds, pillars from Brownells, hex head action screws from J&P, and the Devcon off of Amazon.
I got 2 of the short aluminum pillars for a Remington action. Both had to be modified somewhat. They are sort of V shaped on the top for the round remington action, so I put them in upside down to get the flats next to the flat bottom of the CZ action. The front one needed to be flattened on one side to allow clearance for the mag well screw and the rear one needed to be shortened a little. Both were easy to accomplish with a dremmel.
After I enlarged the channel in the stock to fit the action I drilled out the holes for the pillars. The J&P information recommends a 9/16 forstner bit for the holes, I used a 5/8 because it is what I had. After that I followed the bedding procedure from the bedding thread on Snipershide.
Things I learned.
1. You will get bedding compound on things you didn't mean to. Tape on the outside of the stock is a good side to protect it if you don't plan to paint it. This is probably more of a deal with the tan paint on my Boyds than if you were doing it on another stock. The flat finish is hard to get clean, it's not big deal, I'm planning to krylon it anyway.
2. Take the time to find a drill press to drill out the holes.
3. I spent a lot of time looking at the action on the 453, one thing I noticed is that the rear screw is not into the receiver, it goes into the trigger group mount, so the front screw is really the only true action screw. I'm sure torque on both screws is important to accuracy, but the front one is the one that holds the action in the stock, the back one is screwed to a block that is not as stable.
4. This is an easy job to accomplish.
In case anyone is interested in the $$
Stock - $92
Pillars - $11.99
Action acrews - $19 (+$4 for the wood screw)
Devcon - $41
Shoe polish, tape and bits I had.
Total cost - 167.99 (+ shipping)
Here you can see the ugly, the bottom where I didn't think to look for bedding on the stock. oops. It;s not a problem, it's getting Kryloned anyway but I thought I'd point it out for those who may do this.
I got to looking at the work I needed to do to fit my 453 varmint into a Boyd's Tacticool and decided it was the perfect chance to do my first bedding job on a cheap stock. Fitting a 453 into the Boyds stock that is inletted for a 452 requires a fair amount of material be removed. The 453 set trigger assembly is effectively a rail mounted on the bottom of the receiver that needs to be allowed for.
Got the stock from Boyds, pillars from Brownells, hex head action screws from J&P, and the Devcon off of Amazon.
I got 2 of the short aluminum pillars for a Remington action. Both had to be modified somewhat. They are sort of V shaped on the top for the round remington action, so I put them in upside down to get the flats next to the flat bottom of the CZ action. The front one needed to be flattened on one side to allow clearance for the mag well screw and the rear one needed to be shortened a little. Both were easy to accomplish with a dremmel.
After I enlarged the channel in the stock to fit the action I drilled out the holes for the pillars. The J&P information recommends a 9/16 forstner bit for the holes, I used a 5/8 because it is what I had. After that I followed the bedding procedure from the bedding thread on Snipershide.
Things I learned.
1. You will get bedding compound on things you didn't mean to. Tape on the outside of the stock is a good side to protect it if you don't plan to paint it. This is probably more of a deal with the tan paint on my Boyds than if you were doing it on another stock. The flat finish is hard to get clean, it's not big deal, I'm planning to krylon it anyway.
2. Take the time to find a drill press to drill out the holes.
3. I spent a lot of time looking at the action on the 453, one thing I noticed is that the rear screw is not into the receiver, it goes into the trigger group mount, so the front screw is really the only true action screw. I'm sure torque on both screws is important to accuracy, but the front one is the one that holds the action in the stock, the back one is screwed to a block that is not as stable.
4. This is an easy job to accomplish.
In case anyone is interested in the $$
Stock - $92
Pillars - $11.99
Action acrews - $19 (+$4 for the wood screw)
Devcon - $41
Shoe polish, tape and bits I had.
Total cost - 167.99 (+ shipping)
Here you can see the ugly, the bottom where I didn't think to look for bedding on the stock. oops. It;s not a problem, it's getting Kryloned anyway but I thought I'd point it out for those who may do this.