I also have all walnut stocks currently and being a much harder wood, I have not had wood compression issues. Beech is much softer so the hardening process is of greater advantage...
Beech is harder than walnut
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I also have all walnut stocks currently and being a much harder wood, I have not had wood compression issues. Beech is much softer so the hardening process is of greater advantage...
I also have all walnut stocks currently and being a much harder wood, I have not had wood compression issues. Beech is much softer so the hardening process is of greater advantage...
Beech is harder than walnut
I also have all walnut stocks currently and being a much harder wood, I have not had wood compression issues. Beech is much softer so the hardening process is of greater advantage...
Beech is harder than walnut
There are different grades of walnut, some harder and some softer. Also the grain structure has a lot to do with how tough it is. We have an exotic wood lumber store in our town and my youngest son is a woodworker ( his woodshop is awesome) and he is friends with the guy at the exotic wood place. There explanation is that beech is much harder to finnish and stain due to its grain structure, while it is a hardwood, the difficulty in refinnishing makes some folks think it is really hard, where the walnut is much easier to finnish due to grain structure making folks think it is softer. All I can say is I have owned 4 AA walnut stocks and have never had the wood compress under the screws like I have in the beech stocks that were sent in for repairs. In my experiences the walnut has stood up much better, and the beech is so much more prone to swelling and shrinking from moisture and humidity.
The walnut on my tx isn’t as hard as the American walnut on Winchester 52’s or my 40x.
Some have claimed that bedding works in springers, I have never had a need to try it. All of the springers I have owned over my 40 plus years of airgunning, loosening of stock screws has never been an issue. They have always had nice smooth firing cycles, and with proper addition of a tiny drop of loctite never had screw issues. I know that many folks have had issues as they sent me their rifles for tuning work. After returning them I have never had any further complaints. I also replaced most factory screws with more precise industrial grade screws, which was also a big help as there is much less play in the threads.
Looks like the inserts I use to make, I used brass when the gun had other brass accessories but used blued steel on rifles that had no other brass details. Appearance thing I guess....in my experience the AA guns had better quality screws than the HW rifles. Always had much better sucess with quality screws being used to replace the sloppy thread HW factory screws.
The inserts I posted photos of are hidden by the screw.
Blue for everything you need to remove at some point and red for more permanent things.I use blue locktite