![]() Ignore this and you end up with little softballs of gummy bear bits stuck in your bedding job. ![]() You get balls of tapioca because the nylon can be reluctant to blend properly into the resin base. Not the first thing on my list to have parked next to a steel receiver. My reason is that the stuff has ground nylon added as a filler. ![]() There are a number of products that do this well.Īcraglass gel. Long "open clamp time" -last thing you want is it going off as your trying to fit stuff up. It doesn't have to look pretty, and it doesn't require any more epoxy (usually) than will fit on top of a quarter.ġ. Some simple V-block chassis do not- They have a gap between the bottom of the receiver and the bottom of the V block- and are much more sensitive to action screw torque & repeatable POI removing/reinstalling the action. You'll notice good chassis systems (Manners mini-chassis, for example) do this exactly. Don't put any goo in the stock until the action sits where it's supposed to, stress-free. Support 3 areas on the bottom of the receiverĭo those things and you should never have a problem. If you have light colored soft foam or wood, you need pillarsĢ. If you have an aluminum chassis where the dead-bottom 6 o'clock portion of the receiver makes contact with the aluminum, you don't need to worry about bedding.Ĭ. If you have a composite stock with heavy, fiber-reinforced epoxy (on manners, this is dark grey color) you don't need to worry about pillarsī. The secret to any bedding system is in two key sectors:Ī. I've bedded 2 or 3 stocks with JB weld and 1 with JB kwik.
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