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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Gunsmithing
Mcmillan bedding job gone wrong
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<blockquote data-quote="25WSM" data-source="post: 1703101" data-attributes="member: 38048"><p>Bedding is definatly something the home hobbyist can do. Technique is way more important than the appearance. Little bubble or two Won't hurt anything. When the gun is assembled you can't see it. But when you pay a professional to do it all should be good with the world. Main objective is the stress free fit of action. And pillars so torque can be set the same on the screws. Richard Franklin has one of the best ways to do it. Look it up. I do mine slightly different. I will post a pic of what mine look like.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="25WSM, post: 1703101, member: 38048"] Bedding is definatly something the home hobbyist can do. Technique is way more important than the appearance. Little bubble or two Won't hurt anything. When the gun is assembled you can't see it. But when you pay a professional to do it all should be good with the world. Main objective is the stress free fit of action. And pillars so torque can be set the same on the screws. Richard Franklin has one of the best ways to do it. Look it up. I do mine slightly different. I will post a pic of what mine look like. [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
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Mcmillan bedding job gone wrong
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