Maverick1
WKR
- Joined
- Jun 1, 2013
- Messages
- 1,837
Why is that?I consider a fluted bolt to be a negative. I would pay someone to swap it for a standard bolt. So, for my that makes the value worse.
Why is that?I consider a fluted bolt to be a negative. I would pay someone to swap it for a standard bolt. So, for my that makes the value worse.
It provides more ways for water, mud, dust, and ice to get ino the action.Why is that?
Thanks for the information, had not considered that aspect of it.It provides more ways for water, mud, dust, and ice to get ino the action.
Me either.Thanks for the information, had not considered that aspect of it.
Would you mind linking them?There have been demonstrations of a fluted vs non fluted bolt where a handful of dirt is placed on the ejection port and the bolt cycled - flutes give the grit someplace to go and the non fluted bolt binds up.
I don’t think it matters either way - in 45 years I’ve never had a noticeable amount of crud on the bolt.
I just called Karl Kampfeld who does damn good work; he said it's $100 for threading and $25 if you want a protector added.One of the cheapest guys I know charges $125. I would bet the average is $150 or more.
Also, it is $145 for threading a sporter contour 5/8-24 and adding a shoulder, like on my 22 Creedmoor.I just called Karl Kampfeld who does damn good work; he said it's $100 for threading and $25 if you want a protector added.
In general the weight savings from fluting a bolt does not outweigh the potential issues it can cause. If I handed you a rifle/scope with a fluted bolt and told you to carry it around with a blind fold on across a parking lot. Then I handed you the same rifle/scope with a regular bolt and told you to do the same thing, and then guess which was which, you would have no way of knowing other than feeling the bolt with your fingers.I have ran a rifle with a fluted bolt for the last 10 years and never had an issue. Maybe in certain environments it could be an issue.
Does this include cutting/shortening as well?I just called Karl Kampfeld who does damn good work; he said it's $100 for threading and $25 if you want a protector added.
Never fluted my bolt for weight savings. Never said that. I like the way it looks and ive never had an issue in the 10 years of running a fluted bolt. I'm sure it's happened and maybe it'll happen to me but who knows.In general the weight savings from fluting a bolt does not outweigh the potential issues it can cause. If I handed you a rifle/scope with a fluted bolt and told you to carry it around with a blind fold on across a parking lot. Then I handed you the same rifle/scope with a regular bolt and told you to do the same thing, and then guess which was which, you would have no way of knowing other than feeling the bolt with your fingers.
That was somewhere between 1000 and 2000 videos ago. It was a Bat action - they seem to pretty regularly mention how well nitrided flutes shed dirt. 99.99% of their customers will never have enough dirt on them to find out. LolWould you mind linking them?
Every fluted bolt I’ve used has been more problematic than its non-fluted equivalent.
Either way, it’s probably fine. Just curious.
Mind if I ask who/where? That's a way better price than I'm seeing on the west side and I'm out that way pretty regularly.That's what I paid locally in E. Oregon. No shipping involved though.
Think I paid closer to $120 in Seattle a couple years ago for another Tikka.
Wayne in Pendleton. Everyone warns you that he's "slow", but does great work. I think it's just cause everyone uses him, high volume. He had 60 other thread jobs when I took mine in. Ended up only taking a couple weeks instead of 4. His shop was stuffed to the gills with rifles.Mind if I ask who/where? That's a way better price than I'm seeing on the west side and I'm out that way pretty regularly.
They come in waves. I bookmarked this search and for a while there were only a few results. Then one day 30+ vendors had stainless .223's in stock. Seems to be dropping back down again. Not necessarily an indication that Tikka is going to stop production of the basic stainless models...
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