Boyd Allen
Active member
In discussions of bolt action rifle ignition systems, it is the common practice to measure and discuss the distance that a firing pin falls, from its cocked position, to the point where the shoulder at the front of the pin stops it inside the bolt, BUT if when in this position the tip of the pin protrudes farther than a primer would allow, could we not gain some net, or real fall by shortening the tip?
My friend Bob Greenleaf tells me that he sets Savages for a .035 firing pin protrusion with no problems, yet the common specification is more like .055. While I realize that for factory actions, with their relatively generous pin falls, this sort of change may not have any effect, perhaps for some benchrest actions that have pin falls that are nearer the edge by design, and which may be unintentionally taken over the edge by variations of triggers, or for which the original design was marginal, could not a modification be potentially beneficial? Have any of you played with this?
Because of the relationship of acceleration (progressively increasing speed) and momentum, or energy for that matter, it would seem that changes in fall would have more of an effect than their percentage of of the total fall would seem to indicate.
My friend Bob Greenleaf tells me that he sets Savages for a .035 firing pin protrusion with no problems, yet the common specification is more like .055. While I realize that for factory actions, with their relatively generous pin falls, this sort of change may not have any effect, perhaps for some benchrest actions that have pin falls that are nearer the edge by design, and which may be unintentionally taken over the edge by variations of triggers, or for which the original design was marginal, could not a modification be potentially beneficial? Have any of you played with this?
Because of the relationship of acceleration (progressively increasing speed) and momentum, or energy for that matter, it would seem that changes in fall would have more of an effect than their percentage of of the total fall would seem to indicate.