-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed
mauser bolt hardness on open
hallo ,
i bought recently a nice Persian Mauser 98/29
during tests at the range i noticed that after each fire the bolt
was considerably "hard" to open ( by a hand but with a good effort )
.....only on open ......and without traces of overpressure ( the load
was about 44 gr of Vhita N140 under a Sierra MK HPBT 200 gr )
well, i do not know , the possible reason of it - i know this bolt load
the spring of the firing pin on open and the spring it is hard
....may be the shoulders of the receiver worn ? so on open the bolt
could have to pull forward the case
please some "Mauser spcialist" can help me ?
thank you in advance for some opinion
CC
Information
|
Warning: This is a relatively older thread This discussion is older than 360 days. Some information contained in it may no longer be current. |
|
-
06-07-2014 01:33 PM
# ADS
Friends and Sponsors
-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed
.....not "pull" , but "push" forward
sorry
-
-
Advisory Panel

Originally Posted by
CCAMERA50
( the load was about 44 gr of Vhita N140 under a Sierra MK HPBT 200 gr )
That is well within the range (42.7 - 47.5 of N140) published in the Vihtavuori reloading manual for the 8x57IS with a 200gn bullet. So one would not expect any overpressure or signs thereof.
Take a very close look at the case when it is extracted. Can you see any bright marks or bumps? There may be damage to the chamber in the form of rings or rust pits. When a cartridge is fired, the case expands to fill all these recesses, and if the rings or pits are deeper than about 0.002" the case will be hard to extract.
WARNING !!! If your chamber has such a defect, do NOT try to make a chamber cast - it will be impossible to extract!
-
-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed

Originally Posted by
Patrick Chadwick
That is well within the range (42.7 - 47.5 of N140) published in the Vihtavuori reloading manual for the 8x57IS with a 200gn bullet. So one would not expect any overpressure or signs thereof.
Take a very close look at the case when it is extracted. Can you see any bright marks or bumps? There may be damage to the chamber in the form of rings or rust pits. When a cartridge is fired, the case expands to fill all these recesses, and if the rings or pits are deeper than about 0.002" the case will be hard to extract.
WARNING !!! If your chamber has such a defect, do NOT try to make a chamber cast - it will be impossible to extract!
Thank you Patrick ,
Usually , the first time i shoot a new gun , i make a close case inspection ( it the first step of a
personal standard procedure at the range - ....after inspection and cleaning and slugging at home)
well.....i saw nothing remarkable -
i inspected the bolt lugs but ....nothing remakable
i also ( after it ) stripped the whole bolt and tested it for some kind of tolerance wehn closed
( without spring , firing pin , and all the parts on the rear ) - nothing doing
....i do not know waht to think again ....a inspection of the lug recessees by a borescope ?
-
Legacy Member
I have a Mosin Nagant that I had to shim the rear action screw because without it when tightened I guess the receiver flexed just enough to bind the lugs. Just cycling the bolt I could feel slight resistance but after firing I had to beat it open. All good now....
-
Thank You to WarPig1976 For This Useful Post:
-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed
@ WarPig1976 ................................
me also - on my K31
scissors and Coke aluminium tin work better than ...the better GP11 crtg
unfortunately in this case it do not help - i tested immediately your theory ......nothing
.................................................. ....
i think remain me only to try to test ( like just told me a friend ) the gun with another bolt from another similar Mauser
...if the problem there is still / or not , that could indicate where "go to looking"
the shoulders or the bolt : - || correct ?
a opinion ?
-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed
.....none ??
-
Legacy Member
Two easy checks come to mind. I'm sure you have already, but make sure there's no cosmoline
or otherwise gunk hiding in the receiver and #2 make sure you have the proper spring in the bolt. That exhausts my layman trouble shooting skills.
-
-
FREE MEMBER
NO Posting or PM's Allowed

Originally Posted by
WarPig1976
Two easy checks come to mind. I'm sure you have already, but make sure there's no
cosmoline
or otherwise gunk hiding in the receiver and #2 make sure you have the proper spring in the bolt. That exhausts my layman trouble shooting skills.
Hi ,
first , thank you for opinion
...all the cosmoline elimination it is the first operation i make when a gun come into my hom
...the firing pin spring , it seem to be jus his own , ( ...effectively too "hard" ) however to
"improve" the trigger ...shoot ( correct word ? ) i made a softer spring to test tomorrow
when i will go again to the range for test again
....even renting the K98K range property to see differences also trying a bolt exchange
....continue to the next episode 
CC
-
Legacy Member
Ok, so there have been modifications to the bolt. We'll be here for an update....
-