Author Topic: I failed, need seasoned advice  (Read 2707 times)

Offline Haulroad

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I failed, need seasoned advice
« on: September 01, 2025, 08:10:11 PM »
Hi, I used to have an account on here (IIRC) and my build is not working out due to my skill level with bedding the barrel into the wood. I say this to say it is totally my fault, and not the fantastic kit and support I have received on the phone.

I don’t want to give up but need to make a choice on a different way to proceed so that I am not buying nice stocks and then messing them up again.

Is there an easier kit that requires less fitting?


Offline T*O*F

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Re: I failed, need seasoned advice
« Reply #1 on: September 01, 2025, 08:35:56 PM »
Quote
Is there an easier kit that requires less fitting?
That depends on whose kit you messed up and your budget.

A Kibler kit is the easiest on the market AND I believe you can even purchase it "in the white" which is completely assembled requiring only that you complete the wood and metal finishing to have a finished rifle.

Sell your messed up kit here to recoup some of your expenses.
Dave Kanger

If religion is opium for the masses, the internet is a crack, pixel-huffing orgy that deafens the brain, numbs the senses and scrambles our peer list to include every anonymous loser, twisted deviant, and freak as well as people we normally wouldn't give the time of day.
-S.M. Tomlinson

Offline whetrock

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Re: I failed, need seasoned advice
« Reply #2 on: September 01, 2025, 09:26:21 PM »
Can you describe the problems you’re having? Most mistakes can be overcome.

Offline elk killer

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Re: I failed, need seasoned advice
« Reply #3 on: September 01, 2025, 09:30:50 PM »
say where your from might be somebody close by that could help
only flintlocks remain interesting..

Offline wvcruffler

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Re: I failed, need seasoned advice
« Reply #4 on: September 02, 2025, 02:18:55 AM »
Hi, I used to have an account on here (IIRC) and my build is not working out due to my skill level with bedding the barrel into the wood. I say this to say it is totally my fault, and not the fantastic kit and support I have received on the phone.

I don’t want to give up but need to make a choice on a different way to proceed so that I am not buying nice stocks and then messing them up again.

Is there an easier kit that requires less fitting?

Add a post with specifics - which kit - what issue (include some pics). There are a lot of very knowledgeable people on here.

When you go to do the next kit get a Kibler and attend one of the Kibler rifle building classes that Southern Ohio Artisan Workshops puts on. ITs worth it. Helped me immensely.
Dr Phil

Offline Birddog6

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Re: I failed, need seasoned advice
« Reply #5 on: September 02, 2025, 03:03:57 AM »
Hi, I used to have an account on here (IIRC) and my build is not working out due to my skill level with bedding the barrel into the wood. I say this to say it is totally my fault, and not the fantastic kit and support I have received on the phone.

I don’t want to give up but need to make a choice on a different way to proceed so that I am not buying nice stocks and then messing them up again.

Is there an easier kit that requires less fitting?

Lets back up a just a smiggin.........

1:  What do you have ? & from Where ?
2:  Photo of the issue at hand.
3:  Heck you may have someone Close that can help you, if you tell
     us what city & state.

Details man details  ;D ;)

DO NOT give up.

Keith
Keith Lisle

Offline Bob Gerard

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Re: I failed, need seasoned advice
« Reply #6 on: September 03, 2025, 03:39:44 PM »
I can give you seasoned advise on how NOT to epoxy-bed a barrel: be sure to use a reliable release  agent, otherwise you’re barrel is glued in forever 🥺

Offline Eric Krewson

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Re: I failed, need seasoned advice
« Reply #7 on: September 03, 2025, 03:40:09 PM »
A lot of originals have a round bottom inlet for the barrel; I was going to go that route on my bear pistol to make things easier but bought a stock already perfectly inletted for the Rayl barrel that came with it.

The best thing I can recommend is to buy a barrel and stock blank then send it to Mark Weider for a perfect inletting job.

https://jmstockcompany.com/

I had a now retired expert named Fred Miller inlet the barrels and drill the ramrod hole in my first two builds, it sure made things easier for me.

Here is my fowler barrel and stock blank just back from Fred.

 

Online Daniel Coats

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Re: I failed, need seasoned advice
« Reply #8 on: September 03, 2025, 04:06:21 PM »
I can give you seasoned advise on how NOT to epoxy-bed a barrel: be sure to use a reliable release  agent, otherwise you’re barrel is glued in forever 🥺

Use a heat gun wood blocks and patient tapping and it will release.
Dan

"Ain't no nipples on a man's rifle"

Offline Birddog6

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Re: I failed, need seasoned advice
« Reply #9 on: September 03, 2025, 04:30:06 PM »
I have had Mark & Fred inlet barrels & drill the RR holes for me. BOTH do superb work.

As for Bedding a barrel, I have done couple dozen of them.  The KEY to it is preparation.
you want to do a fresh barrel with no inlets & no screw or pin holes or dovetails. If you
have inlets you fill the inlets & an void with modeling clay.  Good THICK coat of Release agent. 

When bedding has been done for 12 hrs, I put the rifle in the freezer for about a hour.
Then take it out, go to the carpeted floor, muzzle in the left hand, right hand at the
buttstock & I hold it about 6" from the floor & drop the butt on the floor. I do this til the
barrel comes loose & out.  Usually 4-5 bumps & it is out.

One guy asked me one time "What if the wrist breaks ? "  :o  I said, Then you used a
POS stock & now you know better,  ;D 
Keith Lisle

Online Daniel Coats

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Re: I failed, need seasoned advice
« Reply #10 on: September 03, 2025, 04:37:20 PM »
Never heard of using the freezer but it makes sense.
Dan

"Ain't no nipples on a man's rifle"

Offline Birddog6

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Re: I failed, need seasoned advice
« Reply #11 on: September 03, 2025, 05:31:57 PM »
Yes, the steel will contract, the wood does not.  That pulls the metal from the
bedding.  I came up with that idea years ago.

I change allot of roller bearings working on locomotives & locomotive parts.  I
shrink & expand bearings on shafts & housing all the time to make them go on
easier, & not pull metal on the shafts & housings.

On day I walked pass the deep freeze with one & it hit me, same thing. Shrink the
metal from the wood & bedding.  It worked.

But again,  Preperation is MOST important. Taper that breechplug & tang. Fill the
holes if there is any.  I fill the rear of the barrel flush with modeling clay. Those few
threads on that barrel even with breechplug in ?  ???  Will lock that barrel IN.  >:( 
Fill it even with modeling clay & scrap it flush with a razor blade.

Keith Lisle

Offline kutter

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Re: I failed, need seasoned advice
« Reply #12 on: September 03, 2025, 07:08:08 PM »
Try and fix what you have. What ever the problem, there is usually a fix for it and the experience is worth the time put into it. That's the learning part.

You could ditch it and just back up and buy a Kibler Kit.
Fantastic kits. But they are so simple to assemble (and I applaud that!) that you likely would learn very little of what you are needing to learn to do the job when some real 'fitting' and adjustment is a stumbling block.

Plenty of help on these pages to be sure.

It's a rarity that something can't be saved in some acceptable final form so you don't have to hide it in the rafters of the garage from the friends & neighbors wandering eyes.

We all had to start somewhere!,,,and boy did we make mistakes and hit brick walls.
Not everyone had help so close by.
I sure didn't and my early attempts certainly showed it!!

Offline Dave Peelgren

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Re: I failed, need seasoned advice
« Reply #13 on: September 03, 2025, 08:41:40 PM »
Heat the barrel with your wife’s iron till you can’t touch it then bump the butt on the floor a few times it will pop right out.

Offline Bob Gerard

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Re: I failed, need seasoned advice
« Reply #14 on: September 04, 2025, 12:19:03 AM »
I don’t mean to hijack the original question, but if an epoxied in barrel can be removed with heat I will be forever in debt to y’all 👌
(I’m imagining using a heat gun but unsure how to do it without scorching the stock)

Offline whetrock

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Re: I failed, need seasoned advice
« Reply #15 on: September 04, 2025, 12:26:40 AM »
Heat the barrel with your wife’s iron till you can’t touch it then bump the butt on the floor a few times it will pop right out.

I'd imagine you could get an old iron from a thrift store without having to pay too much.

Offline Daryl

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Re: I failed, need seasoned advice
« Reply #16 on: September 04, 2025, 01:59:33 AM »
The freezer is the method used by modern gunsmiths who sometimes but rarely glue one in.
It works.
Daryl

"a gun without hammers is like a spaniel without ears" King George V

Offline bluenoser

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Re: I failed, need seasoned advice
« Reply #17 on: September 04, 2025, 03:46:41 AM »
👌
(I’m imagining using a heat gun but unsure how to do it without scorching the stock)

Use a steel rod a little under bore size and a tad longer than the barrel and with one end rounded and smoothed.  Heat it up with a torch and slide it into the barrel.  It wil get the heat where it needs to be without risk of damaging the stock.

Offline Steeltrap

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Re: I failed, need seasoned advice
« Reply #18 on: September 04, 2025, 03:07:32 PM »
Heat is going to cause the bedding compound to soften or melt. You do run the risk of burning the stock. Cold (freezing) causes two dissimilar substances (wood and metal) to contract at different rates.

With the freezing you don't run the risk of burning the stock, but care must be taken as a frozen stock can split if whacked too hard. (As can a room temp stock...but cold up's the chances)

Online Daniel Coats

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Re: I failed, need seasoned advice
« Reply #19 on: September 04, 2025, 04:25:14 PM »
The bedding compound gets hot when curing. If it's not mixed properly I've seen it boil the release agent out. Oh wait I don't use bedding compound because my inletting is perfect LOL! At least it's better than it used to be.  ;D
Dan

"Ain't no nipples on a man's rifle"

Offline rsells

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Re: I failed, need seasoned advice
« Reply #20 on: September 05, 2025, 06:27:33 PM »
Haulroad,
When I use bedding compounds, I use Johnsons paste wax and put a good coat on the metal parts going into the wood inlet.  After the wax has dried, I use the release agent supplied with the bedding compound as directed.  I haven't had any issues over the years. 
 
Many years ago, I wanted to compete in center fire bench matches.  I checked to see who was building the rifles that were built for the folks placing in the top ten in the sanctioned matches.  I picked out one of the smiths and had him build me a 6ppc rifle.  The guy building my rifle glued the action into a synthetic stock and floated the barrel.  No issues over a period of 14 years.  I wanted him to repaint the stock due to the normal use over the years.  His process to get the barreled action out was to put the rifle in a freezer for a period of time, and the barreled action would be released from the bedding compound he originally used to glue the stock to the action.  I would think the same procedure could be used in your instance.  Good luck.
                                                                 Roger Sells
« Last Edit: September 05, 2025, 06:33:20 PM by rsells »

Offline Fred Hembree

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Re: I failed, need seasoned advice
« Reply #21 on: September 05, 2025, 07:08:52 PM »
Haulroad…what kind of kit do you have?

Offline Haulroad

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Re: I failed, need seasoned advice
« Reply #22 on: September 07, 2025, 07:49:19 PM »
Sorry for the late reply. I got sick and have been resting trying to feel better! This is the excellent Kibler Colonial (58 smooth) which I bought a few years ago pre woodsrunner.

I took too much wood off the back. Rather than buying a new stock and exceeding my ability again at significant cost this will be getting sold. I need a simpler solution for muzzle loader season and also some time to improve my personal abilities on less costly projects.

I’m near Sparta NC/Galax VA and would be happy to pass this into someone’s skilled hands. Once I hit my 30 days this kit will be listed for a very quick sale price.
I appreciate all your replies, goes to show the quality of this community!



Offline Tumbledown

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Re: I failed, need seasoned advice
« Reply #23 on: September 08, 2025, 02:08:26 PM »
It looks like the breech isn't set far enough back. I can see gaps between the breech and stock. I think everything just needs to be seated a bit better.

Offline Steeltrap

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Re: I failed, need seasoned advice
« Reply #24 on: September 08, 2025, 03:28:15 PM »
While there are obvious errors, it doesn't appear that it's not fixable. And done right the fix would never be noticed.