So I, like many other B-Mag owners, am not entirely satisfied with the grouping capabilities of my new gopher-obliterator. I bought a nifty new Boyd's stock for it, thinking that the much more stable and rigid platform would help, but I found out that it didn't. Don't get me wrong, when shooting it at game, it still performs well, but the paper seems to tell a different story. So what's a guy with machine tools, little sense, and big balls to do? Let me tell you. I decided to take a page out of the benchrest boys' book and build a barrel block mount for this beast. Typically, these are built on rifles with a parallel huge barrel that weighs lots more than the action, and the block grabs a large section of the barrel. With the B-Mag, there really only is the section of the breach with the turned rings in it that is parallel, so there isn't a lot to grab. What offsets this (I hope!) is the fact that the barrel and action are featherlight. Here is what I did:

This is a pic of a trued-up aluminum block just a little over 3/4" thick, that I have bored a hole in for the 0.860" breach section of the barrel, with a 0.005" relief to allow for fully seating.

The next step was drilling for the 5/16" NC socket caps I was going to use for the clamping job, and counter-sinking the heads.

Here you see the bolts in. I made the heads to be exactly flush with the top of the block. The block has been cut in half, the holes tapped, and the edges dressed. It's starting to come together!


In these next two pics you see my next stage. I drilled and tapped a hole for a piece of 7/16" ready-rod underneath the barrel. The idea behind this is to have the ready-rod set into an epoxy-filled groove milled in the forend, adding lots of strength and stability to the clamp itself, as well as the forend. As the balance point of the entire gun is forward of the area where I am clamping the barrel, it will want to tip forward, so this supporting 'leg' out front makes lots of sense.

This is a pic of a trued-up aluminum block just a little over 3/4" thick, that I have bored a hole in for the 0.860" breach section of the barrel, with a 0.005" relief to allow for fully seating.

The next step was drilling for the 5/16" NC socket caps I was going to use for the clamping job, and counter-sinking the heads.

Here you see the bolts in. I made the heads to be exactly flush with the top of the block. The block has been cut in half, the holes tapped, and the edges dressed. It's starting to come together!


In these next two pics you see my next stage. I drilled and tapped a hole for a piece of 7/16" ready-rod underneath the barrel. The idea behind this is to have the ready-rod set into an epoxy-filled groove milled in the forend, adding lots of strength and stability to the clamp itself, as well as the forend. As the balance point of the entire gun is forward of the area where I am clamping the barrel, it will want to tip forward, so this supporting 'leg' out front makes lots of sense.
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