feeding problems |
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sheephrdr
Newbie Joined: October 22 2012 Location: Ontario Status: Offline Points: 18 |
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Posted: October 22 2012 at 8:02pm |
just wondering if anybody would be able to help me with my mk3.. last
year it fired, fed, cycled and ejected smoothly, after hunting season i
cleaned it ( i thought well).. ive had it out to the range a couple
times it fires fine still but is very hard on feeding , the rim of the
cartridge seems to be jamming on the underside of the fireing pin while
feeding ( too steep of on angle into feeding ramp?, i can force it but it actualy bends
the cartridge when i do so. ive tried tweeking the magazine as some have
suggested with no luck (mabye not enough).. im not sure if as the bolt head grabs the
cartridge from the magazine if the rim is meant to sit under the
fireing pin while engageing or flush. if i single load it works fine ...
any thoughts would be helpfull as ive been playing around with this for
a while and dont want to take to gunsmith to avoid the cost..
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A square 10
Special Member Donating Member Joined: December 12 2006 Location: MN , USA Status: Offline Points: 14452 |
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is the magazine properly seated ?
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Shamu
Admin Group Logo Designer / Donating Member Joined: April 25 2007 Location: MD, USA. Status: Offline Points: 17603 |
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The contact feeding from the magazine should be just the bottom 1/8" or so of the bolt grabbing the top 1/8" or so of the base of the round. If you're contacting the firing pin something is very wrong. Could the rear lips be messed up allowing the case to jump up way to early perhaps?
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Don't shoot till you see the whites of their thighs. (Unofficial motto of the Royal Air Force)
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sheephrdr
Newbie Joined: October 22 2012 Location: Ontario Status: Offline Points: 18 |
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shamu ya its about an 1/8th ...but the rim gets stuck under the firing pin, and the angle of the ammunition seems to steep.. it goes up the ramp and in but the firing pin doesnt rertract until the last inch of the action.. kina hard to explain.. i assume the mag is seated it clicks when put in and cant pull out.
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Shamu
Admin Group Logo Designer / Donating Member Joined: April 25 2007 Location: MD, USA. Status: Offline Points: 17603 |
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"the firing pin doesnt rertract until the last inch of the action."
This is the source of your problem. The firing pin should not be protruding from the bolt face! Either you have something broken, or incorrectly assembled, or the cocking piece at the rear of the bolt is in the wrong notch of the bolt body. Correct assembly of the bolt & cocking piece has the cocking piece's lug in the rearmost of the 2 possible positions with the cocking piece itself vertical in relation to the action, like this: If this is the problem you can correct the issue by pulling the cocking piece to the rear & turning it to the correct orientation. However I don't think the rifle will actually fire if its assembled incorrectly! |
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Don't shoot till you see the whites of their thighs. (Unofficial motto of the Royal Air Force)
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Zed
Special Member Donating Member Joined: May 01 2012 Location: France Status: Offline Points: 5585 |
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I had a problem when I had forgotten to reset the cocking piece of the bolt after storing it in the fully in (fired) position. Setting back to half cock and the feed was fine, luckily I realised almost immediately, but it could be dangerous if forcing the cartridge in to the chamber with the firing pin fully out.
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sheephrdr
Newbie Joined: October 22 2012 Location: Ontario Status: Offline Points: 18 |
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hmmm i tried half cocking it but the action wont work while half cocked... so shamu your saying the pin shouldnt protrude from the bolt face? the cocking piece is aligned correctly but like i said the pin doesnt retract until you feel resistance from the spring in the action and your pushing the bolt down and to the right . thanks for all your help btw gunsmithing is a 6 week wait so if i cant get this figured out she might be a single shot 303 this hunting season.
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Shamu
Admin Group Logo Designer / Donating Member Joined: April 25 2007 Location: MD, USA. Status: Offline Points: 17603 |
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These pics are of a No4, but your SMLE should be essentially the same action. My apologies for "War & Peace" in this post, but the details are important.Correct, the pin should usually be slightly below flush with the bolt face.
I'm guessing something is reassembled incorrectly after the tear down & cleaning, but its a slow process figuring out what exactly. Can you post some pics of the bolt, cocking piece & action both cocked & uncocked, so we can see the problem maybe? "the pin doesnt retract until you feel resistance from the spring in the action and your pushing the bolt down and to the right ." The only time the pin should protrude is with the bolt fully closed & locked & the trigger pulled. Guessing here, but it sounds like the pin is damaged, the bolt cam burred, or the firing pin assembled with not enough of the screw in the cocking piece threads. Is there a locking screw at the rear, overlapping the back end of the pin & preventing it from turning (unscrewing)? Did you unscrew the firing pin when cleaning? That would possibly change the protrusion amount. Is this the exact same bolt head as before? Look at the bottom inside surface of the cocking piece, right where it engages the "W"-shaped slot in the bolt body. How does the lug look? How about the slot's camming surfaces? Here's how the sequence should work & a couple of tests to help determine the exact problem (maybe). ***NOTE: DO THIS WITH A DUMMY ROUND, TRAINING ROUND, OR ACTION PROVING DUMMY FOR SAFETY REASONS. ABSOLOUTELY DO NOT DO THIS WITH A LIVE ROUND*** Starting with the bolt closed & locked after firing (trigger pulled): As you raise the bolt handle the pin on the bottom of the cocking piece is slid over the cam under the bolt body, retracting the firing pin. (You should see the cocking piece move slightly rearwards as you lift the handle.) As the bolt is pulled to the rear the fired case is extracted & ejected. (at this point the cocking piece should be extended about 1/8" rearwards from the bolt bodie's rear face.) As the bolt is pushed forward the bottom of the bolt body catches the top of the next round sitting in the feed lips of the magazine. (The bolt face should have no firing pin protrusion at this point.) Continuing forward the round is stripped from the magazine & slid into the feed ramp. Riding up the ramp the bullet tip enters the chamber, guiding the rest of the round into the breech. When the bolt is about 1" short of closing the rim slides upwards under the extractor claw. (It should be 95% raised & well past the firing pin hole at this point.) The cocking piece's extension (under the bolt body) should contact the sear (the flat "lever" in the square cut at the bottom of the bolt tunnel in the receiver) of the trigger mechanism at this point & you should feel the first resistance to spring tension as it is held from going any further foreward. (Cock on closing is happening.) Spring resistance continues as the bolt is slid home the last 1" & rotated down to lock the action in firing position. You should have about 1"of the rear of the striker showing at the rear of the bolt body. As you apply the safety lever the cocking piece should go back a further small distance (1/8" or so) as the safety catch (hidden inside the receiver) pushes the striker & cocking piece out of engagment with the sear. Applying the safety should lock the bolt, disengage the sear & trigger & isolate the striker from the trigger mechanism. Pulling the trigger (after double checking for safe operatiion & no live round anywhere near the gun) should do absolutely nothing at all. Releasing the safety after pulling the trigger should NOT allow the cocking piece/striker to "fire" Disengaging the safety should allow the cocking piece to slide forward the same 1/8" or so that engaging it did. Pulling the trigger with the safety off should let the striker & cocking piece slam forward, normally firing the round. This is the only point at which the firing pin should be protruding from the bolt face, & you shouldn't see iot as the action is closed & locked! Now we're right back where we started the cycle. Try this. Do the cycle (you don't even need a round except to check the chambering) step-by-step, comparing it with the steps above & let us know how it is matching, or differing, in your gun at each step. |
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Don't shoot till you see the whites of their thighs. (Unofficial motto of the Royal Air Force)
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Zed
Special Member Donating Member Joined: May 01 2012 Location: France Status: Offline Points: 5585 |
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That is a very clear and precise way to check the operation Shamu. It would be worth pegging that the top of this gunsmithing section.
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It's nice to be important, but it's more important to be nice!
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Canuck
Special Member Donating Member Joined: January 17 2012 Location: Agassiz BC Status: Offline Points: 3535 |
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Zed, I totally agree and Shamu, great explanation! This should be pegged at the top of this section for sure.
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Shamu
Admin Group Logo Designer / Donating Member Joined: April 25 2007 Location: MD, USA. Status: Offline Points: 17603 |
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Your wish is my command, Effendi!
Here is a drawing of the bolt & its components. its much better for showing the relationship of the parts than my picture is. Where several part numbers are listed it's because there are multiple versions of the part, such as different numbered (length) bolt heads. Where different drawings show the same part those are versions of the part. 2: Bolt body. 3 & 4: Cocking piece (2 versions) 5: Locking screw for striker (firing pin) 6: Striker spring (mainspring) 7: Striker/firing pin. 8~11: Bolt heads (come in different numbers & lengths). 12: Extractor claw. 13: Extractor spring. 14: Extractor spring holding screw. |
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Don't shoot till you see the whites of their thighs. (Unofficial motto of the Royal Air Force)
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Shamu
Admin Group Logo Designer / Donating Member Joined: April 25 2007 Location: MD, USA. Status: Offline Points: 17603 |
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Here is the bolt shown assembled, looking up from below. This is a No 4 bolt, but the #1 (SMLE) is functionally very similar, but differs in some details such as the bolt head shape.
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Don't shoot till you see the whites of their thighs. (Unofficial motto of the Royal Air Force)
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sheephrdr
Newbie Joined: October 22 2012 Location: Ontario Status: Offline Points: 18 |
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i think i may have found the problem, with your great help i realize the striker lock screw is missing, and i can turn the stricker in when bolt head is removed. check out photos and tell me what you think. it must have falen out or mabye was never there
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Shamu
Admin Group Logo Designer / Donating Member Joined: April 25 2007 Location: MD, USA. Status: Offline Points: 17603 |
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Glad to be able to help.
First the good news, you've found the problem, the missing screw. Replacing it is a screw-in $2.00 part Just be sure you get the right one as there are more than one type. Specify you want a "Striker retaining screw 0.144" Dia. X 37tpi for a No1 Mk3 rifle" You need to be this accurate because the no4 rifle used a different screw thread & if you get one for a No4 it won't fit the No3 striker's threads. Now the bad news, actually not to horrible. You need to screw the striker back in so that it doesn't protrude except when uncocked, & then secure it with the above screw, that's the easy part. The head of the securing screw binds up against the semi-circular cut in the back of the striker, which should end up pretty much flush with the rear of the cocking piece. But the amount it sticks out when in the "fired" position is very precise a minimum of 1.02mm (0.040") & a maximum of 1.27mm (0.050"). You should really use a special gauge to measure this, but if you don't have one you need to borrow one to measure it. You could use the depth gauge part of a caliper, but the actual gauge will be better.
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Don't shoot till you see the whites of their thighs. (Unofficial motto of the Royal Air Force)
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sheephrdr
Newbie Joined: October 22 2012 Location: Ontario Status: Offline Points: 18 |
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i bought another bolt including screw for 35 bucks, but atleast i have some other spare parts. the shop turned in the striker for me and put the screw on my bolt(in better shape) didnt charge me for any of the gunsmithing.. also bought a stripper clip... everything feeds and ejects properly now:) ill double check the striker in fired positions protrusion, i assume they set it right but ill check it with a caliper ive got a digital one i can use. ill have to take it out and fire it before the season starts ..
thanks again to you all for all your help.. btw kina funny the first guy at the gunshop i talked to told me there isnt supposed to be a screw in the cocking piece, (which was missing from the first bolt they tried to sell me and had the same problem as mine hehe) i argued with him and he directed me to a more compotent employee
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A square 10
Special Member Donating Member Joined: December 12 2006 Location: MN , USA Status: Offline Points: 14452 |
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"...... also bought a stripper clip... ...."
AHHHHHHH , the wrath bof hoadie shall be upon you , its a "CHARGER" lad ,
gl;ad to see this has worked out so nicely for you , i was fearfull it might be more costly
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