• This Forum is for adults 18 years of age or over. By continuing to use this Forum you are confirming that you are 18 or older. No content shall be viewed by any person under 18 in California.

Where to find a lighter ejector spring?

DngBat7

Silver $$ Contributor
Was wondering where to find a lighter ejector spring for a Rpr bolt. At the moment I removed the ejector not to ruin my brass, but was hoping there was a resource to get a lighter spring so the brass will just turn out and remove by hand instead of it flying across the cement?
 
Was wondering where to find a lighter ejector spring for a Rpr bolt. At the moment I removed the ejector not to ruin my brass, but was hoping there was a resource to get a lighter spring so the brass will just turn out and remove by hand instead of it flying across the cement?

One source is: http://erniethegunsmith.com/catalog/i17.html

I needed to do several, so I measured the wire diameter, and coils per inch and ordered some from W. B. Jones spring company. I just cut them to the length I want with a Dremel abrasive wheel.
 
Did you use it in a Rpr?

Guess I need to do a better job of reading.... Sorry I read your post as Rem. But the same approach would work. I measured the OD of the spring (very important) and length. As far as spring rate, not so important. PM me with your measurements, and I can send you one to try.
 
I have a Brownell spring assortment that cut to fit and tune the ejection. The problem with cutting coils is you shorten the length of the spring and possibly loose travel and get a case that may flop back in. Not saying this is the case all the time, but something to be aware of when cutting coils off factory spring. I like a longer spring, but lighter in compression. Mine eject right on the bench in the same spot.
 
This is the size of my spring. How does this compare to a Remington 700 if someone does not mind?
 

Attachments

  • D5C30528-44DB-40B6-BDAF-9DED6B67DCA8.jpeg
    D5C30528-44DB-40B6-BDAF-9DED6B67DCA8.jpeg
    180.3 KB · Views: 103
  • 1DC2E7A5-8B58-446D-884D-5FFB8354E594.jpeg
    1DC2E7A5-8B58-446D-884D-5FFB8354E594.jpeg
    178.6 KB · Views: 103
Was wondering where to find a lighter ejector spring for a Rpr bolt. At the moment I removed the ejector not to ruin my brass, but was hoping there was a resource to get a lighter spring so the brass will just turn out and remove by hand instead of it flying across the cement?
I have seen Bic lighter spring used in BAT actions.
You might try, readily available and inexpensive?????
CLP
 
I clipped 4 coils off mine. problem solved.

Yes sir, that's the way I been doing it and it works just fine. Tension is tension and if you got the right amount then you got the right amount. I posted the same suggestion on another forum once and got blasted by some genius that thinks he knows everything. "Not the way to do things!!!"
I was cuttin' gun springs when he was at his mothers TEAT!!!!
If you really want to be fancy about it you can grind the cut end flat, I usually don't bother. I guess my point to anyone that believes it is wrong to cut a spring.....okay,you sit and wait for the new spring to arrive in the mail....I'm going shooting...right now!
 
I bet the main reason it flops back in because of the shorter length. Gotta keep the length, but lighter compression weight.

You might be right. A weaker spring requires some restraint from the shooter. If it’s cycled fast then it will spin on the edge of the action.
Damn difficult to pull a case out backwards guys.
 

Upgrades & Donations

This Forum's expenses are primarily paid by member contributions. You can upgrade your Forum membership in seconds. Gold and Silver members get unlimited FREE classifieds for one year. Gold members can upload custom avatars.


Click Upgrade Membership Button ABOVE to get Gold or Silver Status.

You can also donate any amount, large or small, with the button below. Include your Forum Name in the PayPal Notes field.


To DONATE by CHECK, or make a recurring donation, CLICK HERE to learn how.

Forum statistics

Threads
165,812
Messages
2,203,100
Members
79,110
Latest member
miles813
Back
Top