According to Otteson, the bolt has 5 parts including the handle and they are all simultaneously furnace brazed together with copper alloy at about 2000 deg F. If the handle joint is done properly, it is almost as strong as welding. The joint is tested after brazing with a pneumatic press applying a calibrated force.
Apparently, there is a problem with the process that occasionally allows the handle joint to fail. I wonder what percentage of handles fails in customer's hands?
RWO
What is PTG ?
The bolt is essentially fully annealed when it comes out of the brazing furnace. It is heat treated afterwards. I'm guessing it is similar to 4140, so hardening temp is close to 1500 deg. F. This has no effect on the brazed joints and is why Remington uses the copper brazing alloy .
RWO
I don't think there is anything wrong with factory Rem 700 bolts. A friend and I had 5 of 9 PTG bolts from a later batch that came off. The solder or braze whatever it is was just plain bad. Drilled and tapped them and no problems since. Wayne
Quick and permanent fix is to send them to Dan Armstrong - www.accu-tig.com Dan does microtig and understands bolt timing. Very reasonable.
I heard there is a person in pittsburg pa that makes a replacement bolt for the 700 action but can not think of his name.
gary b
I heard there is a person in pittsburg pa that makes a replacement bolt for the 700 action but can not think of his name.
gary b
I'd have guessed that they were just silver-soldered. They seem to come loose at what I estimate to be about 700-800° F (based solely on my experience with oxy-acetylene and silver-soldering). I don't even bother with the heat-stop paste anymore.