M-14 Rear Lub

Bigbill

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I recall reading somewhere that M-14 receivers with a rear lug offer superior bedding potential to any other receiver. For this reason the Springfield receiver is allegedly superior to the Norinco.

Is this true?

Big
 
I recall reading somewhere that M-14 receivers with a rear lug offer superior bedding potential to any other receiver. Is this true?

Yes.

For this reason the Springfield receiver is allegedly superior to the Norinco. Is this true?

No.


See:
The M14 Owner's Guide and Match Conditioning Instructions by Scott A. Duff and CWO John M. Miller. - History, development, selecting the rifle, disassembly, assembly, inspection, cleaning, zeroing, match conditioning, and much, much more.
http://www.scott-duff.com/
 
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A rear LUG is a place to bolt a reciever to the stock without showing on the outside. The NRA highpower rules for the longest time would not permit visible external modifications to the service rifles. If you are trying to wring the best possible X-ring bullseye scores at 600yds out of a highly tuned, fully blueprinted and magnificently prepared M14 match rifle, a lugged receiver is one path to follow. If you are content to snap caps at 100yds from the bench, you really don't need a lub - I mean lug.

As for SA vs Norinco, don't believe everything you read on the internet.
 
I have built and maintained a few full house target M-14 rifles with both Norinco and Springfield receivers. The Norico recivers are closer to GI dimensional specifications, so are much easier to fit US GI parts properly.

The M-14 is designed to seat the action into the stock bedding by the spring pressure of the trigger guard pulling down on the receiver. If properly set up nice and tight, this method can work well, but if too loose, it can cause some loss in accuracy. Lugged actions, as previously mentioned, can be fitted with screws, which can provide more consistent seating which may increase theoretical accuracy ...
maybe..

In the real world, the lugged receivers may not improve accuracy by much, but they will provide larger bedding surfaces to help maintain that accuracy and bedding life for longer.

Other solutions would be the aftermarket stocks which completely redesign the bedding ... eg the JAE 100 which drwas the receiver down with screws [ without adding a lug ] or the various designs which "free float" the barrel with a different op rod guide that becomes a bedding surface.

If you can outshoot a non-lugged M-14 rifle, then you already will know that almost any decent bolt action would be a better choice for target use than spending BIG bucks for a lugged M-14 or a special stock.

And I say this as someone who has a JAE stock for sale ...
LAZ 1
 
EXACTLY what Lazares2001 said.... he saved me a krapload of typing. Thanks buddy !!

Save your money and buy some practice ammo, or components... maybe some good glass or scope mounts/rings....
 
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