Bent_Ramrod
Frequent Elocutionist
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Posts: 1524
Location: Southern Arizona
Joined: Feb 8 th, 2006
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Re: Question on falling block single shot, foren
Reply #1 - Feb 19th, 2006 at 1:45pm
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Singleshotjack, Well, if nobody knowledgable wants to get in on this, I guess I'll bite. The literature says that there should be a space or gap between the rear of the forend and the front of the action on a single shot rifle for best accuracy. Where I have (or do) this, I try to make it like a well-done freefloat on a barrel; just enough to slide a piece of paper between (a dollar bill is handy, if I have one left from my latest adventures in single shots). Sometimes this helps; often, it has no particular effect; I can't see that it has ever done any harm, accuracywise. However, I really really hate to undo somebody else's good workmanship unnecessarily, and I find that although general statements can be made to cover the majority of single shot rifles encountered, the individual one you (or I) have tends to be a law unto itself. If I had your rifle, I would develop the best loading I could, shoot it enough to get a good idea of the average accuracy, and then see if it shoots any closer with the forend off. If there's a really noteworthy difference, then I'd start carefully shaving the back of the forend, trying to make the crack as invisible as possible. Worrying about accuracy potential before a shot is fired and starting in with various fixes based on conventional wisdom will work with a benchrest bolt action, glued into a pillar-bedded plastic stock with a premium barrel chambered to a ten-thousandth of an inch, but there are factors working with our kind of rifles that work at cross-purposes and sometimes even cancel each other out. In my own experience, I have a Low-wall that the forend is inletted very closely into both barrel and action that shoots very well. I have a couple Stevens rifles that have the forend gap on some barrels and some contact on others when I screw them in , that shoot very well. I have a High-wall, made up from parts, that didn't shoot worth sour apples until I glass-bedded in the barrel channel, the forend and the rear tangs to total contact with the metal. Also fire-lapped the relined barrel, tried every load in sight and did a lot of screaming, cursing and other forms of spell-casting. Somewhere in the course of all that effort, the gun straightened out. (Wish I'd taken notes.) Not a lot of systematic guidance here, unfortunately, but, whatever works is what you have to do. Hope this helps some.
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