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Long Range Hunting & Shooting
Best rifle to progressively build?
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<blockquote data-quote="Ragnarnar" data-source="post: 1311576" data-attributes="member: 98218"><p>You were not derailing this thread, nor am I. I have been nothing but respectful towards you, and we were, up until you threw a temper tantrum, having a reasonable discussion regarding the pros and cons of different action build options, which is the focus of this tread. </p><p></p><p>You clearly think Remington is the way to go, which is fine. Some people prefer Savages; thats fine too. I'm just offering a different option for the op.</p><p></p><p>You have once again come back to your authority on the subject. I don't care that you're a welder. I don't care that you run a metal shop. I don't care that could weld at 12. I don't think that you're lying about knowing about the subject, but all you have done here is explain why how three pins prevents shearing or shifting (which I believe) and SAY that "drilling a hole doesn't weaken the action" and "I won" without explaining why this is the case. </p><p></p><p>At best, pinning the action will return the walls of the action to its original tensile strength, there is no way that I can conceive of from a physics background, that this will be the case. </p><p></p><p>If I had a piece of steel, one inch thick, into the side of which I drilled a hole and then filled with an interference fitting piece of stock and then put in a arbor press, I submit to you that piece of steel would yield before an untouched piece of the same steel. </p><p></p><p>So again, extending the olive branch, I respectfully ask you to explain why a pinned action will resist catastrophic failure better than unpinned action.</p><p></p><p>I will say that I take exception to your assessment of my price and action comparison. I shoot every day, and have use for all of those features, but in the interest of continuing this thread amicably and and getting an answer to my question above I'm gonna let it go.</p><p></p><p>Best</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Ragnarnar, post: 1311576, member: 98218"] You were not derailing this thread, nor am I. I have been nothing but respectful towards you, and we were, up until you threw a temper tantrum, having a reasonable discussion regarding the pros and cons of different action build options, which is the focus of this tread. You clearly think Remington is the way to go, which is fine. Some people prefer Savages; thats fine too. I'm just offering a different option for the op. You have once again come back to your authority on the subject. I don't care that you're a welder. I don't care that you run a metal shop. I don't care that could weld at 12. I don't think that you're lying about knowing about the subject, but all you have done here is explain why how three pins prevents shearing or shifting (which I believe) and SAY that "drilling a hole doesn't weaken the action" and "I won" without explaining why this is the case. At best, pinning the action will return the walls of the action to its original tensile strength, there is no way that I can conceive of from a physics background, that this will be the case. If I had a piece of steel, one inch thick, into the side of which I drilled a hole and then filled with an interference fitting piece of stock and then put in a arbor press, I submit to you that piece of steel would yield before an untouched piece of the same steel. So again, extending the olive branch, I respectfully ask you to explain why a pinned action will resist catastrophic failure better than unpinned action. I will say that I take exception to your assessment of my price and action comparison. I shoot every day, and have use for all of those features, but in the interest of continuing this thread amicably and and getting an answer to my question above I'm gonna let it go. Best [/QUOTE]
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