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Where did you get the spring for the Barnard?
and therein lies the problem, you are assuming good spring steel is being used when that is not the case with certain manufacturers, both factory and custom. Remington is top of the list. Their springs get weak sitting on the shelf. I've checked brand new actions with springs that were 19lbs....supposed to be 24 according to their specs.... if the manufacturer uses the proper spring steel, there will not be a need to change the firing pin spring in a lifetime.
Nando
MT Guns. They are still importing Barnards into the states.
The spring might be plenty strong enough to ignite the cartridge, but you'll see SD/ES climb when it gets to a certain weakness. Anything less than 20 lbs has definitely caused me problems in Remingtons & clones. Some manufacturers have gone to extra strength springs to guard against this problem, but that has it's own drawbacks. The real answer is quality materials as you alude to. I really like Wolff springs!
Thanks Dusty!If you have a bathroom scale and a set of 1/4" drive deep well sockets you have the equipment to check your firing pin spring
Scott, I went on the Wolff site and checked out Rem 700 SA springs. They offer 3, a 24 lb matching the OEM poundage and then a 28 lb and a 32 lb.I really like Wolff springs!
I keep my firing pin clean and dry. I know crud or dirt isn't the issue. I have seen new springs make a difference. I don't think you can compare a valve spring to a firing pin spring. The Valve spring is shorter, made of way heavier coils and much stronger. Probably even a different material. If you lost 10 pounds on a valve spring you probably would never notice. If you lost 10 pounds on a firing pin spring you will notice. MattScott, Keith -
I concur with your comments.
Relating to those who have changed the firing pin spring because there were issues -
I wonder how many times, in the process of changing the spring, the crud that may have built up around the firing pin and spring was the actual culprit? This crud can definitely impede proper functioning of the spring, and maybe just a good cleaning would solve the problem.
Nando
The more pounds the spring has, the harder the bolt lift is. MattScott, I went on the Wolff site and checked out Rem 700 SA springs. They offer 3, a 24 lb matching the OEM poundage and then a 28 lb and a 32 lb.
What are the benefits of going with more poundage than the 24 lb OEM poundage... If any?
Regards,
Thomas
Thanks Matt. That I had assumed and also a major negative as a benchrest shooter (upsets the rifle on the rest). However I would still like to know the benefit of going with more poundage, if any.The more pounds the spring has, the harder the bolt lift is. Matt
Thanks Matt. That I had assumed and also a major negative as a benchrest shooter (upsets the rifle on the rest). However I would still like to know the benefit of going with more poundage, if any.
Best Regards,
Thomas