Patton243 said:After I cleaned the rifle and put a round in I would have a misfire. The chamber was wet with some of the chemical residue left from cleaning. I used a bore guide, but the brass was wet when I was taking it out of the chamber. After each misfire, I would chamber another round and it would work fine.
Did you dry the chamber in between those shots? You stated that you didn't have anything to dry it with, so I'm guessing no.
Patton243 said:I then shot a few 3 shot groups at the end and there was no misfire issues.
I tried firing the misfires again and they still would not go off either.
Sounds like the misfires were specific to those particular rounds (and no, I don't think cleaning solutions would kill a primer that quickly).
My smith has a tool to take the bolt apart, so I will not be able to do anything until he takes a look inside.
You don't have a workbench edge and a penny?
In the military, we stripped them with nothing more than our bootlace and a dog tag. Took all of a few seconds.
Not rocket science.
Patton243 said:The burr inside the bolt or whatever it's obstructing the firing pin was very difficult to see and could have been easily missed. That burr is not the gunsmiths fault.
I would beg to differ.
If he "trued" the action, he should've been smart enough to check everything.
Which leads me to.....
LHSmith said:IMHO, a REAL Gunsmith would have checked EVERYTHING on a build. It sounds like the work done was by someone who puts parts together.
Bingo.
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