Boyd Allen
Active member
Charles,
When using quotes around words attributed to someone else, the convention is that they would have actually used those exact words. In reviewing my posts, I did not find them as you have them in post #125, and if you take another look at post #120, I think that you will see that your quote substantially misrepresents the gist of what I said. As a matter of fact, it was Vaughn who said that there are several factors that reduce the probability of barrel movement in a benchrest rifle. I am just agreeing with him. I also engaged in conjecture as to other reasons for what he reported...in my earlier posts. Looking back, the question as to barrel stress may have been off the mark, but I make no claim, nor have no delusions as to my infallibility, so I left it as I wrote it.
Getting back to my reference, in an earlier post to the fixture in which the rifle was held during his tests, if there is a threaded joint between two pieces, an action and barrel, and the action is prevented from moving with the barrel, does this restraint not put more stress on the joint than if the two were free to move together? I think that the answer is obvious. Vaughn was a very bright fellow. I learned a huge amount from reading his book, and will learn more as I go back over it, but he was human, and I do not think that he got every single thing absolutely right. I was lucky enough to have had several phone conversations with him, in which he was engaged and quite cordial. I wish that he was still alive so that we could have more discussions.
Threads on these forums often involve differing opinions, and as long as we are not rude to one another, no harm is done.
When using quotes around words attributed to someone else, the convention is that they would have actually used those exact words. In reviewing my posts, I did not find them as you have them in post #125, and if you take another look at post #120, I think that you will see that your quote substantially misrepresents the gist of what I said. As a matter of fact, it was Vaughn who said that there are several factors that reduce the probability of barrel movement in a benchrest rifle. I am just agreeing with him. I also engaged in conjecture as to other reasons for what he reported...in my earlier posts. Looking back, the question as to barrel stress may have been off the mark, but I make no claim, nor have no delusions as to my infallibility, so I left it as I wrote it.
Getting back to my reference, in an earlier post to the fixture in which the rifle was held during his tests, if there is a threaded joint between two pieces, an action and barrel, and the action is prevented from moving with the barrel, does this restraint not put more stress on the joint than if the two were free to move together? I think that the answer is obvious. Vaughn was a very bright fellow. I learned a huge amount from reading his book, and will learn more as I go back over it, but he was human, and I do not think that he got every single thing absolutely right. I was lucky enough to have had several phone conversations with him, in which he was engaged and quite cordial. I wish that he was still alive so that we could have more discussions.
Threads on these forums often involve differing opinions, and as long as we are not rude to one another, no harm is done.