No requirement to do that. There is a pillar sleeve that should contact the reciever and trigger guard keeping both from over-compressing the stock.
I'm doing a "light" restoration on a Savage No4 Mk1 that is in great condition. I noticed as I broke it down that every, and I mean every, screw was little more than finger tight with no visible marks on the screw slots. When I reassemble the rifle I'll be putting the screws back in at the same low torque. As stated above, the pillar is in place to prevent over tightening and cracking the stock but I can't see any harm in leaving the screws loosened a bit to prevent wear or stripping.
Thanks Ed. Interesting as always.
Yes, I do back off my king screws due to the crush factor on the wood.
Remember, in service they had teams of armourers taking care of these weapons, including replacing the forends when needed. We don't have that luxury. So we have to do our own thinking.
Hey Ed, how come PL didn't teach you the front trigger guard screw is not a king screw?
I'm asking for it aren't I![]()
Now for the muzzle. This is where fact differs from fancy. Of all the new fangled methods of fitting fore-ends, with mastic this or rubber mounted that spring loaded wotsits or what-jer-ma-flik thingies that some have tried ….., some who really ought to know better incidentally, none of these methods has EVER been proved to out shoot a properly set up No4. And, to prove the point, not one other method ever got past the first trial when it came to out shooting the No4T. Peter Laidler