You did a good thing by buying that FG stock. Fill in the selector cut-out and the guide-rod retaining pin area, bed it, and you won't look back.
Bonus points for creative cam jobs. I stuck with classic black.
filling in the selector cutout is an aesthetic thing, i know.... but is filling in the guide-rod retaining pin area and bedding it
necessary before firing or just something people do for added accuracy/stock stiffness? if its necessary then i need to throw it back into the wood stock while i work on the FG one, i dont have too much time right now. is
quality automotive short-strand FG sufficient for this?
as for the paint job, i was thinking just olive drab for the stock, and black for the handguard. right now its all matte USGI turd-brown

can anyone recommend an olive drab spraypaint for the stock? ie: brand/color?
to answer the usgi bolt question..... I am building an m14s that i want to use strictly for hunting purposes. I want to be able to shoot commercial .308 hunting ammo, and as accurately as possible. Headspace is important for accuracy, so i took my norc bolt with 9 thou excess headspace and swapped it for a trw bolt that required minor lapping, that left me with a chamber that is bang on .308 go.
mine is marked .308 on the receiver, not 7.62. is it
safe to fire .308 commercial ammo in it? to be honest i am not concerned with turning mine into a tack-driver: i want something 2-3" capable, so accuracy beyond that isnt too important to me.... i dont have the money or time to try and turn it into a sub-MOA rifle. so safety is my primary concern, not accuracy.
quick question on the bolt lockup for you guys:
i just noticed that when in battery, with an EMPTY chamber, if i put my thumb on top of the bolt there is a little bit of front-back play in it. about half a millimeter. is this normal with an
empty chamber?
i cant test it with a round chambered as im not going to drop the bolt/op rod on a live round in an M14 unless im at a range
