I applied the suggestion where a spacer (small square of gasket material) is applied under both forearm mounting screws. This did perfectly center the barrel in the forearm barrel channel and allowed a dollar bill to slip between the barrel and forearm in front of the front screw and between the two screws.
During this procedure I did notice that the two screws did not fit smoothly through the holes and into the dovetailed threaded studs. At the time I did not look further into this issue.
The spacers resulted in no real change in the erratic groups shooting from a rest.
While this may or may not be relative the barrel is a Contender (not G2) tapered 21", blue, .22LR Match barrel that was with the rifle when I purchased it used. Both the G2 carbine frame, stock and barrel appeared new and unused I really have no idea of the history. Having said that I then decided to give the barrel a good cleaning. I am not normally an advocate of aggressive cleaning of a .22LR barrel.
Using both Blue Wonder and Hoppe's #9 it took between 17 and 20 patches before they started pulling through cleanly. The first few patches were the expected black sootie color but the remaining patches were a dirty brown in color. A visual inspection of the bore, prior to cleaning, appeared bright, smooth and lead free. No chunks or scales of lead came out, just the brown residue.
While cleaning I also noticed the reason the forearm screws did not engage smoothly. The rear threaded stud appears perfectly centered on the barrel but the front stud was not centered in its dovetail. It was all the way to one side of its dovetail. Using a small brass drift I carefully tapped the stud toward the center of its dovetail. I positioned it so that the forearm could be dropped onto the barrel and both screws threaded into their respective studs with no resistance using only a screwdriver bit held between my thumb and first finger. No screwdriver handle was used. After centering the front stud the barrel now sits perfectly centered on the barrel channel without the aforementioned spacer.
The carbine has been reassembled without any non T/C gadgets and is ready for another range test. If these two "fixes" do not correct the problem it is time for the barrel to go back to Thompson. They suggested that I send the entire weapon but let's hope that this is not necessary.
Anyone have any comments on my findings, procedures or have other suggestions prior to a return to Thompson?
- Mike