Grumpy gumpy
AH enthusiast
Try a brass drift, less likely to damage anything . There are at least three places I can see where you can get direct access to the bottom metal
Gumpy
Gumpy
+1 on the freezer trick for 24 hours. Saw a vid on YT and the freezer trick worked for that guy.Do not use a steel punch on the bottom metal, use a brass , copper , aluminum or even a hard plastic one when you remove it scrape away some of the bedding epoxy to give it a little clearance, when fitted up there should be about 2mm clearance between the bottom metal & the action, if you have a chest food freezer put the stock with the bottom metal in it over night freeze it & then try to tap it out,
good luck, most of the issues can be fixed with care & the right tools. the shim we are talking about should go under the tang on top not under the bottom metal.
It looks like the bottom metal is pooched anyway. I see a crack at the forward end of OP's mag box that should not be there. Wondering if the crack is all the way around. If so, then I suspect he will not have anything to salvage even if he could get the bottom metal out in one piece ... or rather two pieces.Do not use a steel punch on the bottom metal, use a brass , copper , aluminum or even a hard plastic one when you remove it scrape away some of the bedding epoxy to give it a little clearance, when fitted up there should be about 2mm clearance between the bottom metal & the action, if you have a chest food freezer put the stock with the bottom metal in it over night freeze it & then try to tap it out,
good luck, most of the issues can be fixed with care & the right tools. the shim we are talking about should go under the tang on top not under the bottom metal.
Clearly something is amiss with the action not fitting in the stock properly. Hoping that free floating the barrel removes the tension but I'm not optimistic. He should do that in any event. My guess is the magazine box is too high. If it's butting against the receiver, it should be trimmed down a bit. Should be a very narrow gap between the two. Not too much or follower could get snagged.Re reading this. You say the screws are really snug in those pillar type sleeves?
I would open them out a little so they have clearance.
You are sure the bedding is done properly as in everything touches everywhere at the same time?
I have a BSA P14 sporter that's been bedded and it's not right at the back.
If you do up the front screw it lifts the back of the action a tiny bit.
Needs dremelling out and redoing.
I'm not familiar with Howa. Not sure I've ever held one in my hands. But it really does not make sense to make room in Mauser action screw sleeves. If anything, that would possibly provide more room for the action to move in the stock which would not only compromise accuracy but also put the stock at risk of failure (cracking). It is obviously best to spread the stress of recoil as much as possible within the stock. This is the idea behind bedding. The more contact points, the more area for recoil stress to be transmitted to the stock. The shooter will still feel the recoil the same because he has only one point of contact transmitting recoil - the butt of stock. But the rifle stock can feel recoil at various points and the more the merrier. It's physics."I would not worry too much about relieving the action screw tubes. This is only a 7mm Mauser. Recoil isn't severe. Tight fit shouldn't cause problems."
yeah i wasn't worried about splitting things, but sometimes it doesn't take much of things touching to make things shoot funny.
Ive heard a few things about Howas. There are heaps in NZ and there is something about the bottom of the recoli lug. if its touching it shoots like junk. Something like that?