Bedding
All of these comments are interesting and I am sure that we all have tried different methods over the years to settle on what works for our own needs but I think we are missing the most important part of the bedding process, how to check our work. This has not come up yet in this thread and to all if you do not check your work when finished with the job to make sure it is correct it is for nothing.
Take your best bedding job (we are talking about screwed in actions) and mount an indicator between the barrel and stock then crack the front action screw....if it jumps more than a couple thou at the most it needs to be redone.
The object of bedding an action is to remove any stresses and have a mating surface that repeats that after it is removed from the stock and reinstalled. It is to isolate the action from influences in humidity changes (wood stocks) , this is where the pillars come into play. Composite stocks, the configuration and what fill they use is another animal, pillars are necessary in my opinion for most. (also no contact of action screws with pillars)
My heavy varmint 30BR was built in 2005, 5 piece walnut laminate (I like wood, it is a feel thing), pillar bedded with Devcon aluminum, complete poured pillars and isolated from any wood contact, still to this day the bedding is good. My Panda LV 6 PPC/ 30BR in a carbon fiber/ redwood stock never moves when braking the front action screw, combo of turned aluminum pillars and Devcon. There is a list of others, most hunting/ varmint rifles over the years.........
( I’m not a fan of glue in actions) I am not saying anything bad about glue in's it is just they are not my thing, just stating .
Rick