- Joined
- Dec 25, 2011
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Mark, have you not been reading what I've said. I'm not advocating a thin layer of glass bedding for recoil resistance. I remove a cavity of wood larger than the rear of the breech plug and fill it with glass bedding, force the tang or breech into it while liquid and force out all the air bubbles. This creates a much larger foot print for the rear of the barrel to abut and it perfectly form fits the underside of the tang and rear of the barrel. I refer to it as and anchor because that is just what it does. It is exactly the same principle used in reinforced recoil lugs in heavy kicking center fire rifles and to say it does not work is ridiculous.
I see stocks all the time fit tightly against the cheeks of single shot actions on the end grain of the wood and they give way over time as the wood shrinks, or gets oil soaked. I know for a fact, from experience that glass bedding stops this from happening and you don't have to relieve the tang to compensate for wood compression.
The cheeks of most single shot actions generally have as much surface area to abut recoil as does the breech plug of a muzzle loader barrel and they usually have both an upper and lower tang affixed to the action to help as well.
I'm all for tradition unless it compromises quality and feel some traditions have gotten in the way of more modern technique and product developments that can improve muzzle loading arms. One mans opinion, just different than yours. Mike D.
I see stocks all the time fit tightly against the cheeks of single shot actions on the end grain of the wood and they give way over time as the wood shrinks, or gets oil soaked. I know for a fact, from experience that glass bedding stops this from happening and you don't have to relieve the tang to compensate for wood compression.
The cheeks of most single shot actions generally have as much surface area to abut recoil as does the breech plug of a muzzle loader barrel and they usually have both an upper and lower tang affixed to the action to help as well.
I'm all for tradition unless it compromises quality and feel some traditions have gotten in the way of more modern technique and product developments that can improve muzzle loading arms. One mans opinion, just different than yours. Mike D.