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- Jan 31, 2009
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Gentlemen,
I'd like to ask a question about TC rifles, how they're designed and what forces to expect one of them to put up with.
My tentative plan is to rebarrel of a New Englander; .47 bore shooting a bullet of over approximately 550 grains weight. The barrel length being thirty-six inches.
I'm looking at this and thinking about what the rifle will absorb, the single wedge and that weak spot of all the TC rifles, the wood opposite the lock that likes to develop a crack, typically beginning in that nice radius.
My .458 bore New Englander that I shoot with as cast 45-70 type molds does just fine. The barrel wasn't lengthened any. There are no significant differences in stresses placed on the wedge or the breech area of the stock. As you can clearly ascertain by this posting I'm not so cool and collected about this combination of recoil and barrel length.
What are your thoughts?
Would you think it'll be OK?
Needs a barrel band?
Needs a longer stock?
I'd like to ask a question about TC rifles, how they're designed and what forces to expect one of them to put up with.
My tentative plan is to rebarrel of a New Englander; .47 bore shooting a bullet of over approximately 550 grains weight. The barrel length being thirty-six inches.
I'm looking at this and thinking about what the rifle will absorb, the single wedge and that weak spot of all the TC rifles, the wood opposite the lock that likes to develop a crack, typically beginning in that nice radius.
My .458 bore New Englander that I shoot with as cast 45-70 type molds does just fine. The barrel wasn't lengthened any. There are no significant differences in stresses placed on the wedge or the breech area of the stock. As you can clearly ascertain by this posting I'm not so cool and collected about this combination of recoil and barrel length.
What are your thoughts?
Would you think it'll be OK?
Needs a barrel band?
Needs a longer stock?