Actually, some of the old (teens, 20s, 30s) gunsmith info and write ups address this, and they have fairly detailed (including names) documentation of the hardening procedures as they were done in the various factories. The reason the Eddystone actions were singled out was the method of hardening, done by "eye" (using colour as a reference to hardness) rather then by temperature samples. All the 14s and 17s have very tight barrel to receiver joints in my experience, it's just that SOME Eddystones were hardened too much, which let them brittle. I believe the broken Eddystone story was written by Ackley (at least that's where i recall seeing it first), and I would tend to believe him. But there again, we have one man, on one shift, who may have misjudged the hardening on how many guns? It would be a small percentage, I think. I have custom rifles built on all the manufacturer's 14s/17s, and to date I haven't seen any problems with any of them. Doesn't mean it doesn't exist (or hasn't in the past) just that I haven't seen it. If it truly bothers you, cut the barrel joint loose, strip the receiver, and have it rehardened, it doesn't cost that much. - dan