Question especially for those with significant experience or training in this in hopes of getting some hard info rather than "I've always been told...", "it's what I've always done", etc. In my case I am referring to a tikka, although it may not matter the rifle in general.
I have always been told that when bedding a rifle you should bed a short section of the barrel. This is what I have done on the handful of rifles I've bedded myself, is bedded about 1/2" of the barrel in front of the action (not sure that distance is "correct", but it has worked well enough). However, with chassis being very popular for several of the LR rifle games, I'm curious about the importance and function of bedding the barrel like this, since none of the chassis I am aware of have any support for the barrel whatsoever. What exactly is the function provided by bedding the barrel channel? If those chassis are "good", then why bed the barrel at all on a bedded stock? Is it incrementally better, or is there some other reason to do it? Any insight is very much appreciated--thanks!
I have always been told that when bedding a rifle you should bed a short section of the barrel. This is what I have done on the handful of rifles I've bedded myself, is bedded about 1/2" of the barrel in front of the action (not sure that distance is "correct", but it has worked well enough). However, with chassis being very popular for several of the LR rifle games, I'm curious about the importance and function of bedding the barrel like this, since none of the chassis I am aware of have any support for the barrel whatsoever. What exactly is the function provided by bedding the barrel channel? If those chassis are "good", then why bed the barrel at all on a bedded stock? Is it incrementally better, or is there some other reason to do it? Any insight is very much appreciated--thanks!