Remington 522 Viper question

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New Brunswick
Hello everyone,

I have a Remington 522 Viper .22lr that I bought about 20 years ago, and I decided to take it out of storage. I gave it a good cleaning, and once I was done, I noticed that the red pin at the rear of the housing was sticking out indicating that the rifle was cocked. I tried everything I could think of to uncock my 522 short of dryfiring it by pulling the trigger. I believe that dryfiring rimfire weapons can damage them. I expect that it would not be good on the springs if I left it cocked and put it in storage again.

Anyone have experience with this rifle that would know how to uncock it safely without dryfiring it?

Thank you.
 
Dryfiring rimfires isn't a great idea. I would suggest if you were going to do it once every 20 years, no ill would come from it. I would also suggest that leaving it cocked won't harm or weaken the spring either.

I'm actually drawing a blank thinking of a semi .22 that you can easily de-####!
 
Dryfiring rimfires isn't a great idea. I would suggest if you were going to do it once every 20 years, no ill would come from it. I would also suggest that leaving it cocked won't harm or weaken the spring either.

I'm actually drawing a blank thinking of a semi .22 that you can easily de-####!

Ok, sounds good camster. I won't worry about it. Thank you.
 
I'll have to try that tonight Mark. Should I be hearing a sound when I do this, or should the rifle decock witout making a "click"?

I would expect it to be silent, just like when you do this with a bolt action. The hammer/striker should just follow the bolt home instead of staying back on the sear.


Mark
 
Just shove a finger in the magwell and push the magazine disconnect to the side. That's what I used to do.

Or, close the bolt and insert an empty magazine. If you're worried, use a spent shell as already advised. The rifle has a magazine disconnect, which is why you can't fire it I suspect.
 
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