Excellent point about temporarily gluing the barrel locked into the tang. Also, one has to fill any open space with modeling clay around any open space at the rear of the tang where the hook comes through. This so the glass bedding doesn't flow into that area and lock the tang/barrel permanently into the stock.
Though my TC .50 Hawken I purchased in Jan. 1972 shot great for some years, the stock must have been a little soft and compressed to the point it loosened up the groups. There even was a little up and down movement of the barrel in the stock, when the wedge key was in place.
Since this was the first time I ever glassed a ML, I decided to take some pointers from how the experts used to inlet a Springfield 03 action and barrel into the stock, even though they did not use glass bedding. They would inlet the action and barrel so the very front of the stock put about 4-6 pounds of pressure upwards on the barrel. When we glass bedded service rifles, we also ensured there was tension on the very front of the stock.
Now I understand that might be confusing to some folks. What I wanted to do was ensure there had to be some little pressure for the wedge key to pull the barrel down into the bedding. This meant the wedge key would pull the barrel down tight into the stock bedding.
This also meant I had to very slightly taper the wedge key at the front and from top to bottom on the top side of the wedge key. What that did was allow the tapered wedge key to enter the barrel lug now sitting higher in the barrel channel and then pull the barrel down into the bedding as the wedge key was driven in place.
Then I roughed up the areas of the stock channel where I wanted the glass bedding to go.
I experimented with different thicknesses of steel and brass shim stock that I laid just on the flat inletted surface at the bottom of the stock channel and close to the barrel key for the wedge. Then I tried tapping the wedge key in to see how much pressure would be required to tap it completely through the stock with the difference thicknesses of shim stock. Once I found the shim stock thickness that made the wedge key force the barrel down with a few pounds of pressure, I was almost ready to go.
Now there was some unsightly gap on each side of the barrel and the top of the stock. Then I had to figure out how the glass bedding would close up the gaps. I had decided to glass bed the tang and most of the barrel into the stock, but was not sure at first how to keep excess glass away from the wedge key area. Then it dawned on me that I would only use a thin coat of glass bedding on the vertical sides of the barrel channel inlet close to the wedge key and more glass along all five surfaces in the rest of the stock channel everywhere else.
I thought about using a “tougher” glass bedding compound, but decided to use Brownells Accraglas because there is a little “give” to Accraglas and that could save other problems initially getting the barrel out of the stock after the Accraglas cured. Accraglas was also easier to dye at that time to match the color of the stock. I also thought about using Ram 225 Mold Release because it gives a tighter fit to the bedding, but decided to use Brownells Accra Release because though it would not be quite as tight of a glass job fit, it might also save problems getting the barrel out of the stock. OH, DO NOT forget to Mold Release the Wedge Key along with the barrel and tang and Tang Screw.
Clean up of the glass bedding that squooshed out from the bedding surface was cleaned up using Q Tips dipped in acetone.
This procedure not only brought the accuracy back to my TC Hawken, but it actually improved the accuracy a bit over when it was brand new.
BTW, glass bedding is allowed and done on many of the WBTS period original and reproduction Rifle Muskets fired in NSSA competition. Though there are a couple things you have to do differently with them or with other barrels that have a regular breech plug and are pinned into the stock.
The FIRST THING to prepare a barrel with a regular breech plug for glass bedding, is to ensure the rear of the tang area, behind the threaded plug, is not straight up and down OR WORSE tapered to the rear where the bedding would lock the tang into the stock for all time, unless you are willing to bust the stock to get it out. To illustrate what I mean, the area behind the threaded plug and on the rear of the tang to the left of the threaded plug in the following link is too straight up and down for glass bedding.
https://www.trackofthewolf.com/Categories/PartDetail.aspx/659/1/PLUG-FT-16-5
Notice the difference in the forward taper of the same area in the following example. Though that forward taper is more than necessary, it illustrates a forward taper going down to the bottom that you need when glass bedding.
https://www.trackofthewolf.com/Categories/PartDetail.aspx/659/1/PLUG-LEMAN-16-3
You only need a slight forward taper for glass bedding, but it has to be there. What you can do with a tang that is straight up and down as in the illustration above, is just file a slight downward/forward taper in that area and that only has to be a couple of degrees of the taper forward angle. However, some of those tangs with straighter vertical tang areas MAY already have a slight forward taper angle on them. So it is best to check that with a square before you file in that area, as filing is not needed with even a slight forward taper going down.
ALSO, if there is a hole or half hole in the solid area of the tang so a side plate screw goes through it, you have to fill that hole with modeling clay and cut it level with the surface of the tang around it.
OK, here is a real “Stock Buster” Problem if you don’t prepare for it when glass bedding with a regular solid tang. The threaded plug of the tang almost ALWAYS goes deeper into the rear of the barrel then the rear of the barrel breech face. That is not a problem with normal inletting, but is a Very Big problem for glass bedding. For glass bedding, you have to fill up that space with modeling clay on both sides of the tang and cut the top of the clay even with the rear of the barrel face. If you don’t do that, glass bedding will squoosh into that area and lock the tang and barrel permanently in the stock ”“ or when you try to take the barrel and tang out later on, it will crack/bust the stock.
Many folks I know who glass bed regular solid tangs and barrels, don’t usually use shims like I mentioned for the Hook Tang TC Hawken. However, some of the best gunsmiths for the Round Barrels used on NSSA Rifle Muskets do use one or two thin shims along the length of the bottom of the barrel when they glass bed those guns. Some use cardboard shims that will compress the glass bedding when you drive the pins into the stock. That is what I have found works best for me on round barrel rifles/guns and pinned barrels. OH, ALSO DO NOT FORGET to use Mold Release on those barrel pins and of course the Tang Screw.
Gus