I bought a Remington 700 in .308 today and put my scope on to test fire, I had purchased a previous 700 twenty years ago in .243 and have often wondered how many people bugger up those itty bitty screws when mounting a Weaver scope base with a screw driver?
Bouncing around online tonight and some fellow mentioned that the mounting screws use a softer steel than the receiver, so if a guy was a "Gorilla" with a screw driver and stripped them while torqueing the screws in, a gunsmith would only need to get the broken screw out, and not worry about damage to the rifle's receiver, if that is true? I screwed them in snug, and then added a slight turn, hoping that will keep things good. Did not use a torque wrench or blue locktite, I figure the recoil of a .308 should not be too bad.
My Oldsmobile's engine is aluminum, and the repair manual is strict about torque on putting in spark plugs, but on my last tune up I tried putting some muscle on the ratchet and it seems just like the older cast iron heads in torque allowances. I never stripped out an engine head while putting in plugs back when I was an auto mechanic
Is the design of the Remington 700 forgiving on torque variances with those small screws?
Thanks.