Hoss50 Report post Posted October 19, 2023 How hard is it, and do you have any advice or recommendations? I was going to have a gunsmith do it, but I have probably 3-4 rifles I want to get bedded and that seems like a pretty expensive proposition to have them all bedded. So therefore I was thinking about tackling them myself, but have never done it. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
chuckster Report post Posted October 19, 2023 Not hard If you just bed the area around the lug it's pretty straight forward. Find a throw away stock for one of your rifles and do a practice run. That way no pressure on the first one. Use good release agent, be sure the action sits level in the stock, and do not create a mechanical lock between stock and action. Devcon plastisteel works good. Lots of options for bedding compound tho. 1 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
CouesPursuit Report post Posted October 19, 2023 Pretty easy. I've done 4 Savages that included a Bell and Carlson stock with an aluminum block, Boyds wood, and one higher-end Savage tupperware. I used blue painters tape for the recoil lug and stock edges and Play-Doh to fill in everything I didn't want compound getting into but it dries out if you are doing the project beyond a days work, modeling clay is better. Devcon 10110 is the best compound, especially $-wise for 4 stocks. I really liked using several layers of Hornady One Shot as a release agent. No mess or fuss. I used action screws covered in red bearing grease and gently set them to 15 lbs. Food for thought and especially if you don't have a smooth barrel nut, even a small amount of compound in a ridge of the nut (or anywhere) will lock the action to the stock. Fill any nut ridges or edges on the action not facing down with Play-Doh/clay. Triple check before you marry the action/stock and clean out any overflowing compound immediately with qtips, etc. In addition to roughing everything up with a dremel on any stock, I drilled some shallow holes in my plastic stock project and it worked really well for me. 4 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Dano562 Report post Posted October 25, 2023 Very easy just make sure you prep very well and it will go smoothly. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
trphyhntr Report post Posted October 25, 2023 Is it worth it? Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
thegunsmith2506 Report post Posted October 25, 2023 8 hours ago, trphyhntr said: Is it worth it? Not usually. Cheap stocks can be helped some but its too much work. I would rather replace them. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
sjvcon Report post Posted December 13, 2023 A good stock probably doesn't need bedding, though it is a comfort to most people to know they did everything they could to make their rifle as accurate as possible. I hear McMillan now tells people NOT to bed their stocks ... if I recall correctly. But if you do bed it, I'd pillar it as well. Bedding without pillaring never made a whole lot of sense to me. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Fern Report post Posted January 13 I’m in the same boat. Would love to watch someone do it in person Share this post Link to post Share on other sites