- Location
- Prince Albert, Sk
if it shoots leave as is
If that were my rifle, I would lap the left lug in the pic to at least 60% contact.
I suspect you've done this before?? If not, use a very fine stone, very carefully to start.
It may actually be a problem with the lug seat in the receiver. You'll have to determine which component is the problem.
Some folks just use automotive valve lapping compound, such as cloverleaf brand, in the small green tins. To do this, you will need to apply the compound on the seat of the lug and work it up and down. Be sure to keep the bolt fully assembled so the spring give you rearward pressure against the offending faces.
It goes pretty fast, so be careful.
Good luck, you deserve it at this point.
Wouldn't that increase headspace ?
Grizz
I've never seen a Remington lugs that far from true... it's not unusual for the mass produced items to have tolerances out a bit but that looks as if it could be from 1/10000 to 5/1000 out. Usually one will have near 95% contact and the other anywhere from 20-90% contact and someone building a target rifle will have that trued along with several other points. Depending how far out that is, lapping that lug so the other engages might result in excess headspace. It looks like a deep gall already scratched out of the lug, I'd be suspicious of the lug recesses in the receiver as well or the primary issue.
disclaimer:I'm a tradesman in field other than machining/gunsmithing so naturally I defer to a specialist.
if it shoots leave as is
Would do the same. Go shoot it. This is what matter after all.
You purchased a rifle not a piece of engineering marvel.
Did benchmark not stand behind the barrel?
That is not a Rem bolt!
Sorry, I was ambiguous in my statement... I know it's a Weatherby bolt: I was simply comparing it to Remington which in the eyes of some has suffered plenty of QC issues: Which is to imply that I would never have expected this in a Weatherby, even their economy line.