Yeah I did that on a couple other rifles, seems a flush plug could be fitted and held in with the pin.I just leave the hole empty......no problem.
Perhaps a dummy ejector that retains the spring but is flush with the bolt face when extended.Yeah I did that on a couple other rifles, seems a flush plug could be fitted and held in with the pin.
One might notice it only with very accurate rifle/load setups, but the rifles it has happened to me on are very accurate (range between .25 and .5 at 100 with no wind). Without the ejector there is no way with a 700 bolt that you are seating the cartridge in the exact, same spot in the chamber every time.I removed the ejector from all of my prone rifles, no problems.
Steve Bair
Then I guess the firing pin slamming into the primer has no affect on the location of the cartridge.One might notice it only with very accurate rifle/load setups, but the rifles it has happened to me on are very accurate (range between .25 and .5 at 100 with no wind). Without the ejector there is no way with a 700 bolt that you are seating the cartridge in the exact, same spot in the chamber every time.
I would just say, before you do anything semi-permanent to your very accurate 700, pop the ejector out and shoot a couple of groups and compare to previous.
The reason for removing the ejector is that the ejector is pushing (preloading) base of the cartridge and is contributing to the cartridge not being straight in the chamber and potentially causing accuracy issues. Just one more issue not to have to contend with.
I started this thread because when I was trying to find jam and touch lengths in my 222 the land marks on the bullet were only showing on one side of the bullet, like the cartridge was pushed off center by the ejector.Do it and your accuracy will TANK instantly. Happened to me in a 600-yd F Class match tonight. First 20 while a little gale was blowing - a 197. Second 20, nearly dead calm, I was ALL OVER the target. No consistency whatsoever. The ejector got stuck down in the hole on the last shot of the first string, or the first sighter on the second string. Tried to get it to pop out but it was a no go. It had happened to me once before during load dev. so as soon as I noticed the rifle had stop ejecting I knew why the rounds were flying wild.
I don't know exactly why this is, but you stop the spring-loaded ejector from pressing against the base of the case and you are DONE FOR, accuracy-wise.