Wolfdawg
Gold $$ Contributor
I was set-up this past Saturday at Williamsport with my Dasher on relay 8, bench 4. Of course the wind was whipping, as usuall.
The sighter period started and on my 3 sighter, I noticed a small puff of smoke. I looked at the case and noticed that the primer had been pierced. A small center section of the primer was missing where the firing pin had struck. I thought immediately "well, that must be the CCI 450's I loaded for this match". I wanted to try new primers with this load, so what the heck.
Anyway, the rest of the sighters went fine. Then the record rounds started. On the 4th shot, *click*, missfire... I cycled the bolt 2 times and nothing. So I pulled my #10 sighter from my shoo-off rounds and kept going. Well, 3 more missfires later, I finished the record rounds.
I went back to the bench and was trying to figure out what happened. The missfires had an odd shaped firing pin indent, and even stranger was that 2 primers on rounds that went off had the firing pin indent actually protruding outward, like a nipple.
My shooting buds immediately told me it was a weak firing pin spring. Si I went to take the bolt apart and noticed a small silver 'plug' in the firing pin channel in the breech face. Apparently, when the first shot got pierced, the primer piece plugged up the firing pin channel and was acting as a buffer evertime I fired or tried to fire a shot. STRANGE!!!
So, moral of the story....if you pierce a primer, check your bolt to find out where that piercing went...
All I did was relieve the firing pin tension with a Kleindorst tool and it popped right out, no problem.
Here endeth the lesson...
Wolfdawg ;D
The sighter period started and on my 3 sighter, I noticed a small puff of smoke. I looked at the case and noticed that the primer had been pierced. A small center section of the primer was missing where the firing pin had struck. I thought immediately "well, that must be the CCI 450's I loaded for this match". I wanted to try new primers with this load, so what the heck.
Anyway, the rest of the sighters went fine. Then the record rounds started. On the 4th shot, *click*, missfire... I cycled the bolt 2 times and nothing. So I pulled my #10 sighter from my shoo-off rounds and kept going. Well, 3 more missfires later, I finished the record rounds.
I went back to the bench and was trying to figure out what happened. The missfires had an odd shaped firing pin indent, and even stranger was that 2 primers on rounds that went off had the firing pin indent actually protruding outward, like a nipple.
My shooting buds immediately told me it was a weak firing pin spring. Si I went to take the bolt apart and noticed a small silver 'plug' in the firing pin channel in the breech face. Apparently, when the first shot got pierced, the primer piece plugged up the firing pin channel and was acting as a buffer evertime I fired or tried to fire a shot. STRANGE!!!
So, moral of the story....if you pierce a primer, check your bolt to find out where that piercing went...
All I did was relieve the firing pin tension with a Kleindorst tool and it popped right out, no problem.
Here endeth the lesson...
Wolfdawg ;D