adamsgt
Jerry Adams
I bought a Harrells custom sizing die for my HV gun which is a Bat action. So I decided to make up some new brass. The first time through I used the bullseye capped with wax method for fire forming. For the second forming I used bullets and VV133 ~29 grn. I had removed the firing pin from the bolt to check the "feel" of the brass and everything seemed fine. I had 64 rounds loaded and went to the range to fire form. The first round was a "click". The primer showed what appeared to be an acceptable dimple. The second round fired normally. I continued through all 64 rounds and had 27 ignition failures. I ran the 27 through again and had 3 that fired. Immediately suspected problems with the bolt and firing pin. As I had left the bolt disassembly tool at home I was done for the day. When I got home I took the firing pin out of the bolt and sprayed action cleaner through the bolt and cleaned some residue from the tip of the firing pin. I took one of the failed rounds and pulled the bullet, dumped the powder de-primed and seated a new primer. Re-assembled the bolt put it in the gun chambered the round and pulled the trigger and got a pop from the primer. So, I repeated the process for another round and got a satisfactory "pop".
At this point I figured the problem had been a dirty firing pin so I reloaded the two rounds and with the other 22 rounds that had been attempted twice I went to the range the next morning. This time 13 rounds fired and 11 failed. Returned to the house and pulled the bullets from all 11 rounds dumped the powder de-primed and seated new primers. Put the first one in the gun and got a "click". The next 10 popped normally. So I took the last straggler and seated a new primer and it popped.
So, that's the sequence of events the best that I can describe it. Up to this point I've not had one ignition failure on this gun. Some possibilities come to mind. In removing the firing pin to check the brass I could have dislodged something in the bolt that interfered with the firing pin. Now this is the first time I've removed the firing pin to check case fit..
The continued failures after cleaning the bolt could have occurred because the primers were affected in some manner by the first and second strikes.
Discussed this with my Friday lunch posse and one suggestion was to run my bolt in my ultrasonic cleaner. Another suggestion was to replace the firing pin spring. I had bought the gun used and had never disassembled the bolt until now. There is a fair amount of grease covering the spring and the threads at the back. Is that normal?
Are there any particular tricks to removing the spring from the firing pin? I'd hate to have something zapping through an eye.
At this point I figured the problem had been a dirty firing pin so I reloaded the two rounds and with the other 22 rounds that had been attempted twice I went to the range the next morning. This time 13 rounds fired and 11 failed. Returned to the house and pulled the bullets from all 11 rounds dumped the powder de-primed and seated new primers. Put the first one in the gun and got a "click". The next 10 popped normally. So I took the last straggler and seated a new primer and it popped.
So, that's the sequence of events the best that I can describe it. Up to this point I've not had one ignition failure on this gun. Some possibilities come to mind. In removing the firing pin to check the brass I could have dislodged something in the bolt that interfered with the firing pin. Now this is the first time I've removed the firing pin to check case fit..
The continued failures after cleaning the bolt could have occurred because the primers were affected in some manner by the first and second strikes.
Discussed this with my Friday lunch posse and one suggestion was to run my bolt in my ultrasonic cleaner. Another suggestion was to replace the firing pin spring. I had bought the gun used and had never disassembled the bolt until now. There is a fair amount of grease covering the spring and the threads at the back. Is that normal?
Are there any particular tricks to removing the spring from the firing pin? I'd hate to have something zapping through an eye.