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  1. #1
    Legacy Member Pacifist86's Avatar
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    Help with a family M1 carbine

    Hi all,

    Hoping someone has experience with an issue and can point me in the right direction. I have a problem with an M1icon carbine that seems like the sear won't catch the hammer half the time. When at the range, most of the time the rifle functioned fine. But, sometimes it would chamber a live round and the trigger was dead. I'd eject the round, chamber a new round, and then it would resume working fine. It seemed to work better if the barrel was more vertical when pulling the slide back.

    I took it apart at home and saw that the hammer would just follow the bolt home instead of locking back into place. So I cleaned everything up, reassembled, and the problem persisted.

    Here's what it looks like:


    I then ordered the Wolff M1 Carbine rifle service spring pak and replaced the sear spring and the operating rod spring. But, it seems like the hammer is still just a millimeter or two from locking back into place.

    Another view:
    Imgur: The magic of the Internet

    Any tips?

    Thanks!
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    Legacy Member jond41403's Avatar
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    How new is your hammer spring? Is it a wolf spring as well? If it were mine and I'm no expert by the way, the first thing I would check is the hammer spring, it may be just a hair too strong. The sear itself may be getting worn too. Also, I would just change one spring at a time. Process of elimination. Wolf springs may end up amplifying your problems if you change a bunch of springs at the same time in my opinion, you may be creating another problem that you didn't have before.hth
    Last edited by jond41403; 04-18-2021 at 11:45 PM.
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    Help with family carbine

    I had the exact same problem. I found the hammer face worn due to poor heat treating or no heat treating. It was an aftermarket part. It was also beating the back of the bolt. I would check both for wear. I would change to another hammer first and see what happens.

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    Contributing Member W5USMC's Avatar
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    Did you replace the sear? Check the sear notch on the hammer? Does the sear move freely when in place in the trigger or are the sides of the trigger binding it. Are you sure your replacement sear spring is good?

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    Legacy Member DaveHH's Avatar
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    If I recall, some sear springs have a smaller end that is the end that goes toward the sear cup. Maybe turn the spring around?

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    Quote Originally Posted by Pacifist86 View Post
    It seemed to work better if the barrel was more vertical when pulling the slide back.
    First Welcome to Milsurps Pacifist86,
    2nd be prepared for countless pieces of advise now that you've got the hood open.
    You'll find a great group here.

    I've 'Listened Very Closely' to your video audio and believe I don't hear the Trigger reset Click, until you manipulate the hammer.
    Taking in to account what the others have mentioned to check, I'd add making sure your Trigger Spring is oriented correctly... laying Flat on the Triggers rear notch (behind the pedestal). If bent or weak it may be the reason the Sear isn't raising up to catch the Hammer notch.
    When your holding the action up..... Gravity may be whats helping cock the Hammer.

    Below- Copied and Pasted from: http://www.90thidpg.us/Reference/Man...-1276_1947.pdf

    Paragraph 11 Page 12-13 (6) (7) (2)

    (6) Engagement of sear with hammer. The sear should engage with
    sear notch in hammer when bolt is about halfway retracted. A crisp
    click may be heard as sear slides forward into the sear notch in hammer
    under force of sear spring. Retract the bolt fully to insure complete
    engagement and retention of sear. If click is not heard or trigger pull
    appears to be light or excessively heavy, examine sear and sear notch
    in hammer for wear, burs, foreign matter in sear notch, or weak or
    broken sear spring. Trigger pull should not be under 5 pounds or over
    7 pounds.
    (7) Engagement of sear when trigger is not released. The sear should
    engage and hold the hammer when the trigger is held back and the
    slide operated rapidly. Test by grasping the carbine by the grip of the
    stock with the left hand with index finger on the trigger. Pull the
    trigger all the way to the rear and hold in that position. Grasp the
    operating slide handle with the right hand and move the bolt back and
    forth rapidly five or six times. Release the operating slide handle in the
    forward position, release the trigger, allowing it to move fully forward,
    and then pull it again. If the hammer does not fall, it has jarred out of
    engagement with the sear and followed the bolt forward. If this is the
    case, the carbine may fire full automatic and the firing mechanism should
    be inspected for worn or faulty parts.
    (2) Trigger. Trigger should move forward under force of trigger
    spring when released from rearward position. If trigger does not move
    forward positively, trigger spring may be broken, disengaged, or bent.
    Trigger hang is also caused by old type triggers with the 4° angle on
    the forward face of the pedestal. Test trigger pull as explained in paragraph 13.
    TESTING TRIGGER PULL is on page 15-16, reading in part:
    a. GENERAL. (1) Test trigger pull for smoothness and for
    pressure exerted. Trigger pull should be clean, without creep, smooth
    in action; and the force exerted to release hammer should be more
    than 5 pounds and less than 7 pounds (See b below.) If pull is rough,
    or not within specified limits, or creep is present, it indicates that there
    is wear or burs on sear nose, hammer notch, or top of trigger lip, or interference between trigger and housing.
    Read All of Inspection Paragraph 31, Starting on page 43....

    33. Maintenance and Repair Page 49
    b. HAMMER FAILS TO COCK. This condition may be due to damaged
    sear, broken sear spring, burs or foreign matter in sear notch in hammer, or failure of bolt to move far enough to the rear on recoil movement to cock hammer. Examine parts; clean and replace if necessary.
    c. STONING NOSE OF SEAR. If sear nose or hammer notch becomes
    burred or unevenly worn, preventing proper seating of nose of sear in
    notch, the burs may be removed in an emergency, and uneven surface
    leveled with a fine grained sharpening stone. Stone surface to a polish
    only, being careful to maintain angle of face. Stoning should be done
    only by trained ordnance personnel. If possible, parts should be replaced by selective assembly.
    d. CORRECTING TRIGGER PULL. (1) A light or heavy trigger pull
    may be caused by foreign matter or burs in the sear notch in the hammer, on the nose of the sear, on the top of rear end lip of trigger where
    the rear end of sear rests, or in the elongated pivot hole in the sear.
    Such burs or foreign matter will prevent nose of the sear from seating
    fully in hammer notch. To correct, remove foreign matter or stone
    burred surfaces to a polish, using a fine grained sharpening stone,
    taking care to maintain surfaces, angle, and sharp edges. Replace
    badly burred or damaged parts. Stoning should be done only by trained
    ordnance personnel.
    (2) A light pull may also be due to a weak or broken sear spring
    which will not seat the sear fully in the hammer notch before the
    pressure from hammer spring is applied to the nose of sear through the
    hammer. Correct by removing foreign matter or replace sear spring.
    (3) Uneven surface of hammer notch or worn nose of sear may also
    cause a light pull. Correct by stoning surfaces evenly, being careful to
    maintain angles and sharp corners of faces stoned.
    34. Functional Check Page 50-51
    a. Cock hammer and check seating and positive retention to limit of sear nose in hammer notch. Continue to retract hammer of rearward
    movement and observe forward movement of sear to maintain retention. Sear should continue to contact hammer throughout movement.
    Pull trigger; sear should release hammer crisply. Trigger pull should
    he from 5 to 7 pounds. Release trigger. It should move positively to
    forward position under force of trigger spring and be held there firmly
    and without shake even when sear is not assembled. When trigger is in
    forward position and hammer cocked, the sear should rest upon or
    above top of rear pedestal of trigger.

    NOTE: These are the Highlights.... More Info between the lines.

    Also View this Video to watch Sear Hammer relationship:

    https://www.milsurps.com/showthread.php?t=17368

    Keep us updated,

    Charlie-Painter777

    A Country Has No Greater Responsibility Than To Care For Those Who Served...

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  13. #7
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    Here is a link to a short animation showing the Sear-Hammer interaction.
    Sear is the last type..... But works the same as your Sear.

    Scroll to bottom of the page:
    The U.S. Caliber .30 Carbine Operation & Animations

    HTH,
    Charlie-Painter777

    A Country Has No Greater Responsibility Than To Care For Those Who Served...

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    Legacy Member Pacifist86's Avatar
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    Thread Starter
    Huge thank you all for the replies!

    @jond - I did not replace the hammer spring yet. I saw the new one in the Wolff spring pack was quite a bit longer and did a bit of digging to find that it looked like there were a few different types of these springs. So, I was holding off on changing it (or purchasing an additional/correct one). But great point on only changing one thing at a time to truly find the root cause.

    @RWS - worn hammer face would definitely make sense. Just 1mm of wear on the hammer (and likely even less given the angle that the hammer is at when it engages the sear), seems enough to make it finicky.

    @W5USMC - I have not yet replaced the sear. It does move freely when installed, but I did notice that it just looked and felt rough when I had the parts disassembled - so probably worth picking up a replacement to test that out as well. Since the same problem persists with both the original and new sear spring I'm hopeful that one (or both) of those are okay.

    @DaveHH - great point, and probably the cheapest fix to try immediately. I'll try turning the sear spring around to see if it has any impact.

    @painter - huge thanks for pointing to these resources! I have wondered about the trigger spring. When initially disassembling to investigate I found it really difficult to reinstall the trigger spring. That is not a spring that came with the Wolff spring pack, so I think I'll pick one up to try that as well (for $3, why not). It also makes sense that the hammer should engage the sear when the bolt is about half way back. Clearly in my case the bolt is traveling all the way to the rear without the hammer and sear engaging.

    Thanks again all! Time for me to get work with the parts I have and picking up a few replacements to try out one at a time. I'll report back the results.

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    Legacy Member jimb16's Avatar
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    There is another possibility if none of those other suggestions cure the problem. There could be a partial blockage of the gas port. That would contribute to a weak slide operation. In my opinion, that is the least likely problem and would require removal of the gas piston to cure. I don't recommend doing this unless as a last resort.
    When they tell you to behave, they always forget to specify whether to behave well or badly!

  18. #10
    Contributing Member W5USMC's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by jimb16 View Post
    There could be a partial blockage of the gas port.
    Not very likely since it also happens when he pulls the op slide back manually.
    Last edited by W5USMC; 04-22-2021 at 11:10 AM.

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