Thank you to both posters for the helpful replies, and especially to agalland for the useful info/tips. As for the scope and mounts I have, it's an already assembled set from Robert S. a military Kahles scope in HT mounts. I was also considering epoxy resin, and then drilling the holes in and screwing or just using the epoxy? Would this be a viable alternative to soldering which as already stated, isn't for the faint hearted?
Once again thanks to both posters, much appreciated.
let a gunsmith handle this task and you shouldn't be disappointed with the results.
Regards
+1. You can also take it back & get the job done the way you want it, if not happy with it.
I disagree..
In my past experiences I have come to discover that gunsmiths are no different than Doctors or Lawyers.
All 3 of them have the Diploma hanging on the wall that says they passed the tests required to graduate but it is not a true reflection of their abilities in the real world.
I am sure all of us @ some point in time have had an occaision to deal with doctors or attorneys and discovered that all are not created equal.
There are superlative Docs,magnificent Lawyers, and Smiths that are true Mechanics....and then there is everybody else which can range from good to barely competent.
Fact of the matter is....if he didnt do it right the first time... what makes one think he can do it right the second time.
A lot of guys will take on work and say they can do it when in fact they have never done it before.
When I sent a pic of my completed repop HT to Robert,he made the comment "You know,not everybody can do those correctly" and he is right.
Not sayin there arent competent smiths that are capable of taking on a job and doing it right even if they havent done it before. There are.
I'm just saying that there are plenty Smiths that cant.
Shop around and make your expectations explicitly clear. Point blank them with "Have you done this before,and are you 100% sure you can do this right,because if you cant I will not pay for it"
Lot of Smiths in this world and I am betting not many have done HT mounts.
Lot of disgruntled customers with screwed mounting jobs running around...just ask the good Smiths that had to fix them.
But I will repeat that I would be reticent to do it myself unless I had witnessed it being done in person previously.,and had a fair amount of mechical skills and tooling available.
Southwest;69571 Contact Vaugn99 about installing your mounts. l[/QUOTE said:That would be an excellant solution...only one problem.
He lives in the United Kingdom..
Customs would make it very difficult .
I once had a gunsmith mount a scope on a 98 and it was done off centre bore
In the meantime I've mounted lots of scopes and also made my own q/d mounts (that do return to zero!) so these jobs are not impossible to do at all for anyone with basic tools skills and proper care
a first timer needs to avoid the wrong advice so often repeated on some forums
my suggestions are : firstly you would use low temp solder (420F melting point) - not silver solder - the soldering heat is NOT enough to make any change to the heat teatment/hardness of an action
successful soldering is based on keeping the heat within about a 10-20 deg range circa melting point - its not brazing nor welding you are doing so you never need to use excess heat, and if you do use a ridiculous amount of heat the solder will never set so you would just be ruining any chance of a good outcome
those 'soldering will affect heat treating' stories are just a complete nonsense
btw the front base screws used are mostly just a standby to hold the scope and mount on in the rare case that the soldering fails - same reason why there is a screw on the soldered on rear sight base, its a precaution against solder melting under extreme use
properly soldering the bases will provide more than adequate strength even without the screws, so the screws can be installed after the solder has set and test firing has taken place
ignore the idea that that the solder must be kept soft as the screws are screwed in - it just isn't necessary
and solder applied to both surfaces is also unnecessary - you should apply solder only to the base and flux the receiver where the base is being installed
to successfully solder onto a blued or phosphated finished receiver you must remove the finish in the area where the soldering will occur - emery cloth will remove the finish back to bare metal - if you fail to do that the solder job will fail either immediately or later in use- even using screws won't save having to re-do the job
you should initially do a trial fit of scope and mounts on rifle - see how the fit is for gaps etc if any or other problems exist - align scope and bore sight (use collimator if you have one ) in order to remove any possibility the mounting you do will be so far out that using the scope/mount adjustments won't be enough to get it back correctly aligned once permanently fitted- then mark the receiver to later more easily locate the bases correctly when soldering
if you haven't heated a 98 action receiver front section before (strip it so you are only working with the barrel and bare receiver) beware it may take more than 5 minutes using a moderate gas flame to get the receiver hot enough (near 420F to begin the job)
you must never try to melt solder onto an inadequately heated piece of metal as it won't set properly
the trick to good soldering is to have the largest mass object hot enough to melt the solder you have already put onto the lesser mass object you are joining to it, and let the heat radiating from the larger mass object facilitate the final 'joining ' of the parts - the bases being smaller in mass should be heated last to just below 420F so as to have the solder pre set but still 'hard' on them - you will keep the action heat right around 420F while introducing the bases to the action and the heat from the action will do the task of re-melting the solder on the baseswhile you hold the parts together - the you just let them cool enough to 'set' and harden- you shouldn't need 3 hands - lol
the rear base receiver mounting involves much less heat time than the front base will because there is far less metal to deal with
the final must do task is to check the strength of your finished soldering job - you can do do this by striking the soldered on parts with a rubber hammer or block of soft wood - a good hard hit - a proper solder job will pass the test and you can then be confident that the soldering won't fail at first firing!!!!!!!!!!!! p.s. softwood won't damage the metal =remember hit it hard!
when hit if the base comes off it wasn't done right! better to find out now than later when shooting
after test firing you can later centre punch and drill the screw holes and insert screws
THE WAY YOU KNOW IF THE TEMPS YOU HAVE ACHIEVED ARE RIGHT IS BY WATCHING THE SOLDER - the solder surface will indicate when it is about to 'melt '
got a question, just ask
Thank you Twein, I am looking into the JBWeld and it looks pretty good to me. I'll keep you posted with how I get one. Thanks again
JB Weld is the weakest choice for mounting scope mounts. The tensile strength is about 3960 PSI. The lowest temp soft solders are in the range of 4000 PSI. Silver solders, or hard solders, vary in the percent of silver, but require increased temp and have significantly higher tensile strength in the range from about 14,000 to over 80,000 PSI. The solder joint is more likely to fail due to shear strength and it's about 60% of the tensile strength.
The strength of the joint depends on how well the parts are fitted. Minimum space or perfect machine fit yields the strongest joint if done correctly.
Contrary to what bubba indicated above, his comments are not consistent with Jerry Kuhnhausen or James V Howe.