My main reason for going back to skim coat is that epoxy will shrink after a few days. I don't like to have to force my receivers out of or back into the stocks.
Not all epoxies shrink on curing... one of the reasons I use Brownell's Acra-glas products is it is formulated to not change through the curing process... and I always tape clearance of the front, sides and bottom of the recoil lug.
You're right on Brownell's Acra Glas.
I have a rather large stash of Titanium Putty, which was surplus after the company I worked for shut down. They were going to toss it and I rescued it.
I like it because it's about the hardest epoxy I can find. It does however have about a 2% shrinkage problem.
We prefer to blend our own bedding compound using aerospace epoxy resin as a base and several different fill materials. One can tailor the viscosity to suit the bedding, can also tailor physical properties of the bedding material to suit the application of the rifle. Even choose the hardener to suit requirement/temper possibilities. Shrinkage can be very low due to high fill grade of solid materials achieved by using different sized and shaped fillers.
The depth or bedding thickness depends on the stock, bit like foundation of a house. Build on sand and you need thicker foundation. Some composite stocks have very soft fill materials, much softer than the bedding material meaning one can bed deeper. If the stock material is stronger/harder than the bedding material one should try skim bedding as mentioned before with alu stocks or high quality composite stocks.
edi
I would try a bedding with around 2-3mm wall section.The stock in question will be Walnut. Probably 3 pieces glued together.
I don't understand the allure of exotic epoxies and I hate hard epoxies. If you have to alter the bedding you have to grind with carbide tooling. You can't scrape a little away or take a cut with a sharp chisel.
In my opinion you are defeating the purpose of pillars when adding something between the action and the pillar, you should have hard contact.
As for the thickness I only skim coat unless there is a problem requiring relief.
BB
Pillars do not have to be metal... they can be poured using bedding compound and they work as well a machined ones... and all pillars do is to prevent stock compression damage as in the case of light weight filled glass stocks.
Stocks are glass bedded to get a perfect fit, I bed on top of the pillars for the same result.
In most cases one tightens the action against pillars. Pillars often do not have exactly the shape of the action and one can decide to have the little void filled with bedding compound or with air. I know which is stronger and transfers heat/vibration better. In our bedding compound the aluminium particles have an av. diameter of 45 micron. Mostly bed against carbon pillars anyway and the competition rifles seem to shoot well like that. Whatever one does one can calculate how much difference it would make either way then make a decision.
edi
Maybe you misunderstood. For example I just bedded a Barnard P action in a stock that was not made for this action. Rear action screw received an alu pillar, this pillar was coated ll round with bedding compound and the screw on to the action with the usual ~ 7nm torque. The pillar sits on the action with the applied pressure, any excess resin is pushed out and the pillar sits metal on metal with the exemption of the odd 45 micron alu particle trapped between or squashed. The advantage is that one has bedding compound where the pillar is not in full contact with the action. As I said a very good way would be to do some calculations about flex etc. I still think the outcome will show it is better to use bedding to fill the gaps.Very hard to validate one method over the other, but it was always done metal to metal.
If things have evolved to the point that bedding compound can replace metal even aluminium then that is news to me.
Point is if you are going to the trouble of installing pillars then some part of the metal pillar should contact the action
on one end and the opposing metal at the screw head end.
My .02
BB