What are you planning on doing with this action? Fun, hunting or competition - if so, specifically what discipline? This will help get you more reliable information.
Stanley
I think Goodgrouper has been smoking something.
Top shooters have been winning with everything on his list.
Nothing wrong with a BAT 3 Lug at all.
Todd Tyler
I think Goodgrouper has been smoking something.
Top shooters have been winning with everything on his list.
Nothing wrong with a BAT 3 Lug at all.
Todd Tyler
I think Goodgrouper has been smoking something.
Top shooters have been winning with everything on his list.
Nothing wrong with a BAT 3 Lug at all.
Todd Tyler
So David youre saying the 3 lug bat doesnt have a shorter bolt lift than a 2 lug? That was the whole point in the roller- the 3 lug has to cock the firing pin the same distance with less bolt throw. Same with like a browning how they tout the shorter bolt lift- they dont mention the horrendous effort it takes over spreading that lift out over more rotational degrees like a 2 lug. I have 2 and 3 lug bats and the 3 lug definitely has less degrees rotation to open the bolt
So David youre saying the 3 lug bat doesnt have a shorter bolt lift than a 2 lug? That was the whole point in the roller- the 3 lug has to cock the firing pin the same distance with less bolt throw. Same with like a browning how they tout the shorter bolt lift- they dont mention the horrendous effort it takes over spreading that lift out over more rotational degrees like a 2 lug. I have 2 and 3 lug bats and the 3 lug definitely has less degrees rotation to open the bolt
To get to the rationale behind the use of more than two lugs, I think that it is useful to review an article that was written years back, by Creighton Audette, and published in Precision Shooting magazine. In short range benchrest I believe that , quality brass, close fitting chambers and dies, as well as careful management of FL die settings tend to minimize the effect that he described. In the article, he pointed out test results that showed that when the thin and thick sides of case bodies were aligned with bolt lugs (in their closed position) there was less shot dispersion than when they were oriented at 90 degrees to the lugs. From this he inferred that wider lug contact, and more lugs, distributed around the bolt face, minimize the effects of imperfect brass on shot dispersion. I am working from memory here, so feel free to correct any mistakes.