Boyd Allen
Active member
I don't know that it jhas been
Hint: "Rifle Accuracy Facts"
I don't know that it jhas been
Not necessarily. A long time ago, I think it was on a Friday before a match, I asked a group that included Lee Six, Dennis Thornbury, Gary Ocock, and a couple of other big names that I cannot at the moment recall if a a well done pillar job would work as well as a glue in. The last response came from Lee, who said that he favored doing both, on the same rifle, pillar bed and then glue. What he was recommending included torquing action screws, even after gluing in.
I'm not sure what you're intimating here Boyd..... I think everyone agrees that glued and screwed is most stable. I just ordered a BRM from Jim this week and he reiterated your words basically verbatim
Hint: "Rifle Accuracy Facts"
I would think tight by hand could be a relative variable term. Like who's hand, What's holding the barrel or action or how hard did you snap it.?
snap 'd is not hand tight.
maybe some basic education in threaded fasteners and torque would help.
Are you going to give us lessons?
Fitted this new barrel to my Panda project today. The first witness mark is where it comes up tight by hand. The second mark is 100 lbs. lbs/ft. of torque.
Good shootin'. -Al
By the way. Everybody gets hung up on the seemingly brutal recoil of the overly large chamberings and just assume that the barrel and action are seeing the same thing.
They don’t.
The only thing that the barreled action sees is the amount of pressure placed on the bolt face upon ignition. The pressure exerted against the base of the bullet is trying to shove the barrel one way, the pressure exerted by the case head against the bolt face and lug abutments is trying to push the action the opposite way.
If you shoot an old 6.5 REMINGTON Magnum at 62,000 psi, and a 338 Wetherby Magnum at 62,000 psi, the actual load on the bolt face is identical. Your body will feel the difference, but what you feel, what the scope and it’s mounts feel, and what the stock feels is entirely different than what the actual pressure exerted against the bolt face and directly transferred to the barrel shoulder joint.
By the way. Everybody gets hung up on the seemingly brutal recoil of the overly large chamberings and just assume that the barrel and action are seeing the same thing.
They don’t.
The only thing that the barreled action sees is the amount of pressure placed on the bolt face upon ignition. The pressure exerted against the base of the bullet is trying to shove the barrel one way, the pressure exerted by the case head against the bolt face and lug abutments is trying to push the action the opposite way.
If you shoot an old 6.5 REMINGTON Magnum at 62,000 psi, and a 338 Wetherby Magnum at 62,000 psi, the actual load on the bolt face is identical. Your body will feel the difference, but what you feel, what the scope and it’s mounts feel, and what the stock feels is entirely different than what the actual pressure exerted against the bolt face and directly transferred to the barrel shoulder joint.
Al, that's what I was referring to and posted how to calculate bolt thrust....pi r squared x pressure in psi. R being the radius of the cartridge case ID. So I agree with you that the bolt thrust at a given pressure does change a fair amount with different case diameters.PSI is an abbreviation, it stands for pounds per square inch.
some facts regarding the force exerted against the joint on some cartridges;
-6PPC=10,740lb
-.308 Win=12,000lb
-300WSM=17,000lb
-338LM=19,000lb
speaking of character studies....... and since this is my thread...... I think I've found I've a third "mode" in my life.
I gener'ly operate in two modes, "Work Mode" and "Home Mode"..... each of which offends a different set of people but generally "Work Mode" is the one which rubs folks "feelings" raw the quickest. So I try to wind down into "Home Mode" before getting on BRC.
But this morning I'm finding it even harder than usual to sort out folks' viewpoints. My mode this morning is "My Dad died Thursday, I just lost a good friend and mentor, my Mom just lost her BEST friend Mode" and altho I've been working down in the shop where my Mom and Dad have spent Dad's last few weeks.......experimenting and building guns and in-and-out checking on Dad until the wee hours of the morning all week......and it's been very therapeutic...... and I'm well-rested and feeling blessed that Dad finally Went Home.......
And while I'm not looking for condolences nor "understanding"......
I'm seeing an almost snarky side of me
who'da'thunkit!
ME!
SNARKY!!
Think it might be best I hare my lanky butt back down to the shop and grind up another action.....get off the social media.....
later
al
That is about what I come up with.
Jackie, I broke the barrel loose and went back on with it. Using a fine point surgical marker to make the reference points, I took it from as tight as I could make it with my hand and then torqued it to 100 lbs/ft., just like before.
The reference marks are right at .080 apart.
For kicks, I grabbed three Stan Ware chambered Panda barrels, one chambered by Ron Hoehn, one by Manley Oakley and one done by Dan Lilja....from back when they did chambering/fitting.
Each of them are virtually dead on for reference marks, as compared to this one.
Good shootin'. -Al
PSI is an abbreviation, it stands for pounds per square inch.
I don't know how to illustrate this clearly but simple fact is that the same pressure over more square inches does more work as in "exerts more force"...... like you step out into the wind with a box in your hand, you'll feel a push. You step out into the same wind carrying a sheet of plywood you might get blown over.
Same wind, same psi, larger surface area.
Increasing the surface area of a rifle chamber while exerting the same psi on it DOES NOT mean the stresses on the boltface, the bolt lugs and the chamber walls are somehow magically equal because "exact same pressure"..... a rudimentary working knowledge of hydraulics may be useful here.
The term for the force against the boltface is "bolt thrust" and it's not imaginary. It's the reason people who understand this stuff make larger bolt lugs, more stout abutments...... and it's the reason for larger tangs being required when moving to larger diameter chamberings.
In actual fact this is basic, fully quantified stuff straight from the engineering handbook.... rifle action designers and carttridge designers run the numbers every day.....the simple FACT is that Jim and Jim and Ralph and Jerry and Greg and Harold and Henry and many many others have long since stopped arguing here on this board with people who can't separate fact from opinion........and the REAL problem here is we've folks who've never tested this stuff spouting opinions simply because "alinwa is wrong"
fascinating character study, but opinions don't change facts.
some facts regarding the force exerted against the joint on some cartridges;
-6PPC=10,740lb
-.308 Win=12,000lb
-300WSM=17,000lb
-338LM=19,000lb