Re: Savage floating rear tang
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: SavageMOA</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Flyboy, I'd like to see the pictures when it's finished. Also, are you a pilot or is flyboy just how you shoot. Kidding. I'm actually a helicopter pilot so I was curious</div></div>
The tang on a Savage is fixed at the rear action bolt and free towards the butt end of the rifle which creates essentially a cantilever beam. Any time you apply force on a cantilever beam , stresses are introduced. Torquing the rear action bolt with material under the tang will create a variable upward force with a moment arm across the length of the tang - especially given that the trigger and bolt release cutout are not symmetrical across the radius of the action. Then you have a situation where not only is it a straight upward force but there is also a rotational aspect. Granted, all of these factors may be very small...but they're still there...
I'm not saying free floating the tang is the only way to do it, google 'statics' and 'cantilever beam', learn all you can, and make your own choice.
See below for pictures of my tang, hopefully you can tell what I was talking about.
Also, typing 'see below for pictures of my tang' sounded pretty dirty. And yes, I am a pilot (although, the descriptor is probably accurate for my shooting as well but only four out of five shots in a group...).