Edd
Gold $$ Contributor
I have previously read something similar to this, I think it might have also been one of your comments. After reading it I decided to use two measurements for firing pin travel. I decided to use the distance from cocked to primer contact as one measurement and firing pin protrusion as the other. I want .200" of travel before primer contact and .055" of protrusion. I prefer the feel of a little bit of cock on close. I've only done a couple of actions but neither of them has over .020" cock on close. .020" doesn't feel offensive to me.Firing pin fall is measured on an empty chamber. The front of the firing pin flange is what stops the pin fall when dry firing on an empty chamber. With a Remington style striker assembly, I believe that one would have to remove material from the front of the flange in order for the pin to fall farther. This would also require modifying the pin tip for a couple of reasons. First of all the taper behind the tip diameter might contact the bolt, keeping the pin from falling to the point where the front of the flange contacted the inside of the bolt. Secondly the increased fall would increase pin protrusion in direct proportion to the increase in FP fall. The usual standard for pin protrusion is about .055 but when the pin falls on a live primer in a properly sized case it is stopped by the primer, well short of that. You can make your own measurement on a Remington by comparing how far down in the shroud the back of the cocking piece is after dry firing, and comparing it to how far down it is after firing a live primer. With that difference and the actual measured FP protrusion, you can see how much of the excess protrusion might be, keeping in mind that you do not want the front of the flange to bottom when actually firing a round. Years ago Bob Greenleaf (retired engineer from Savage) toldme that he set his personal rifles for a FP protrusion of .035. Bob was with the company for 25 years. For those who are not familiar the model 110s had adjustable FP prutrusion. To get a better understanding of the whole protrusion thing, Imagine a pin that had a tip that was so long that it was flush with the bolt face with the action cocked, which would make the protrusion equal to the fall. In that case, the pin would only be able to fall the distance to the primer from the bolt face plus the depth to which it deformed the cup. You need to use an empty case for these tests because I believe that in the case of a hot load the primer dent may be pushed back a bit. from where it would be if the primer alone was fired. Excess protrusion actually reduces the effective pin fall and reduces the energy delivered to the primer.










