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#1 |
Senior Member
Join Date: February 23, 2018
Posts: 191
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Savage model 340 help
"WE" have an older savage model 340 in .222 that my father in law handed down to my wife several years ago. I handload for the rifle and have never been able to get it to shoot very well. I decided to get it out to this week to check the torque on all of the action screws and scope screws. I learned that the screw behind the trigger guard has been broken. This screw apparently goes directly into the wood of the stock. The screw looks like a plain old wood screw and it has broken off short of the point of being able to get enough bite into the stock to actually do any good.
What should I do to remedy this? My first thought it to maybe get a little bigger and longer screw to attempt to get some bite. IDK if this is a good idea or not. Help needed and appreciated. |
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#2 |
Senior Member
Join Date: February 13, 2006
Location: Washington state
Posts: 15,248
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It's just there to hold the trigger guard in place, just get a longer screw.
__________________
Never try to educate someone who resists knowledge at all costs. But what do I know? Summit Arms Services |
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#3 |
Senior Member
Join Date: April 12, 2009
Posts: 750
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drill the hole and glue a dowel in it.
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#4 |
Staff
Join Date: November 2, 1998
Location: Colorado
Posts: 21,877
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Part of the screw still in the stock? Broken screw remover.
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Vigilantibus et non dormientibus jura subveniunt. Molon Labe! |
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#5 |
Senior Member
Join Date: August 19, 2007
Location: Montmorency Co, MI
Posts: 1,551
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Hardware I used to go to occasionally had a 340 about 1962, caliber perhaps 218 Bee. I had no $$ then. Year or more later I did get a Savage 219 in 22 H, Good gun except 8+# trigger. Shot a couple cats w/ that gun.
Wish I had a 340 0r similar one in 22 H or 222.. |
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#6 |
Senior Member
Join Date: December 30, 2006
Location: midwest
Posts: 1,107
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love my 840 in 222. i would find a way to fix that. it out shoots the 340 in hornet by a country mile. bob
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#7 |
Senior Member
Join Date: August 5, 2012
Location: Carthage, NY
Posts: 231
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The Numrich schematic shows that screw to be a very short one, only about three threads in the working part. I wonder if you couldn't use something like a dental pick to free the broken part up enough to get a bite on it with a small needle nose pliers and twist it out that way.
I've used that method to remove a couple of broken wood screws in the past that were much longer than the one pictured. |
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#8 |
Senior Member
Join Date: January 2, 2015
Location: The swamps of WNY
Posts: 753
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Its a one screw stock. The rear screw just holds the trigger guard.
Had a 340 in 30-30. kicked like a mule. David |
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