C
chris roland
Guest
im haveving a swindelhurst built with lilja brl harrells tunner kelbly brfb stock. have i gone the wrong direction
I've shot one for a while and I truly love it. Now it boils down to who's srewing it all togeather.
Gentlemen:
Kelbly's has done rimfire work for me for years (I do my own too, but have several Anschutz 2000 barrels done by Greg Wally - and Greg does ALL my Swindlehurst work).
Greg (and Kelbly's) are the best out there - absolutely second to NONE.
The barrel I used to win the Nationals last year was finished by Greg - he is a great friend, and the very best at this craft.
Calfee (and others) have convinced many that rimfire smithing is some kind of "black art" - which is just a huge pile.
I have smithed them for years (with good results) - this stuff IS NOT hard. A little attention to detail and setup is all it takes.
Just wanted to set the record straight
kevin
I am assuming you have a round 14xx thru 19xx series action Chris.
Great rifles have been built on this action - there are many who will not use the 2000 series actions because they believe these more competitive (rumor had it that that is why the round action was never phased out when the flat bottomed 2000 action was introduced).
Many Olympic champions will shoot nothing but the round 54 action.
I have rebarreled (and seen them rebarreled) a number of ways - all of them sucessful. You can turn the shank and press / glue it in or thread them (Kenyon threaded them - I do the same based on his work). When I thread these actions, the shank thread OD turns out around .812" - at 20 TPI.
When I bed them, I typically use pillars and make a new recoil lug (just to make sure the action returns to the bedding in the same location each time its removed). I like the pillars because the forward screw can crush the stock material over time and contact the shank threads - making barrel removal a real task. I stop the bedding just before the bolt notch and let the rear free float.
You will love the Kelbly BR stocks!
Good luck,
kev