Send back to Savage. They will replace the springs and test fire. They have A1 service.
Hi, I have a Savage Mark ll fv-sr, that I haven't shot a whole lot. The thing is, it's been stored for a couple years, with the bolt removed.
The other day I went to insert the bolt, it gave me "trouble". Reminded me when I went through a whole thing' with my Mosin lol, so..I looked up any info etc.
When I got in in, & finally working normal/smoothly...it's not strong enough to engage the primer. I can get it to 'fire' if I push on the bolt with my thumb hard, as I squeeze the trigger ..& she goes, other than that = No go, light strikes.
Other than the obvi. to give it a good cleaning, strip the bolt right down, check firing pin etc. Am I missing something Obvious?? It worked b4 taking bolt out.
Has anyone heard of anything on these, with similar situation? Can it be something is not 'aligned' correct..or something that's not {within} the bolt itself?
Any insight is appreciated. Cheerz ~
J.
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Hi, I have a Savage Mark ll fv-sr, that I haven't shot a whole lot. The thing is, it's been stored for a couple years, with the bolt removed.
The other day I went to insert the bolt, it gave me "trouble". Reminded me when I went through a whole thing' with my Mosin lol, so..I looked up any info etc.
When I got in in, & finally working normal/smoothly...it's not strong enough to engage the primer. I can get it to 'fire' if I push on the bolt with my thumb hard, as I squeeze the trigger ..& she goes, other than that = No go, light strikes.
Other than the obvi. to give it a good cleaning, strip the bolt right down, check firing pin etc. Am I missing something Obvious?? It worked b4 taking bolt out.
Has anyone heard of anything on these, with similar situation? Can it be something is not 'aligned' correct..or something that's not {within} the bolt itself?
Any insight is appreciated. Cheerz ~
J.
...
I believe the MKII is '#### on opening bolt' and as such you have 'stored' the bolt Cocked all that time. It may have weakened the spring OR the inside is 'gummed up' causing the FP to drag.
Have you ever taken the bolt apart to clean it? Often manufacturing grease will gum up when not in use. A good practice to take apart bolts - I've found crap even inside CZs.
I believe the MKII is '#### on opening bolt' and as such you have 'stored' the bolt Cocked all that time. It may have weakened the spring OR the inside is 'gummed up' causing the FP to drag.
Have you ever taken the bolt apart to clean it? Often manufacturing grease will gum up when not in use. A good practice to take apart bolts - I've found crap even inside CZs.
The "don't store it cocked" advice seems to stem from the idea that all springs will "take a set", but this isn't the case. Good quality springs won't take a set, and there's no worry about having a load on them all the time. Who knows who actually uses good springs, though, I suppose. I've replaced a firing pin spring before that I thought was suspect, but it might have been fine. What I've gathered is a weakened firing pin spring can start introducing some inconsistency in ignition leading to a bit larger SD. Has anyone actually had experience with one causing ignition failures? Seems like that would have to be quite a lot of weakening, but who knows? Any first-hand experience with that here?
Hey, thank for all the replies. I did think it had something to do with the stock, initially, one of the bolts was loose, the stock had a bit of play. Now its tightened up, & still only light strikes. I think I'll double check all that again though.
I will post couple more pics ^ as requested.. I think I will take it down {bolt apart} as much as I can first, inspect/clean & see if she better after that.
The bolt may have been stored, not in it's natural' position, as when I went to put the bolt in for the first time, I had to play around, as it wouldn't just slid in naturally at first. As said above, it may have lost rigidity, if bolt was in a cocked position, out of the rifle for a couple years..
These riles use the bolt handle as their locking lug. If the base of the handle or the mating notch in the receiver wears.( and they will!),the head space can increase to the point that you get light strikes. The old Cooeys suffered from the same design. An easy fix is to build up the face of the notch slightly, or the rear of the bolt handle. I would lean towards doing the receiver, as I suspect the bolt handle is only soldered to the bolt the same as a Cooey. To much heat there is not a good thing. A spot of tig welding and dress it down with a file or stone till it will close tight again. The receivers and bolt handles are soft to start with which is why they wear like they do, so not a lot of worry about losing temper doing the job (well... other than your own). Hope you can get it running .....catnip
OP I assuming by the way this post was written you were not having issues with this before the gun was stored for a while??
I'd second the suggestion you try without the stock to eliminate that as a variable. After that I'd blast the bolt with a can of brake cleaner to help clear out any oil or grease that may be causing issues.
Seems like a weird problem to have after long term storage with the bolt out though? Seems like the kind of problem that would require use so the parts are rubbing and wearing?
These riles use the bolt handle as their locking lug. If the base of the handle or the mating notch in the receiver wears.( and they will!),the head space can increase to the point that you get light strikes. The old Cooeys suffered from the same design. An easy fix is to build up the face of the notch slightly, or the rear of the bolt handle. I would lean towards doing the receiver, as I suspect the bolt handle is only soldered to the bolt the same as a Cooey. To much heat there is not a good thing. A spot of tig welding and dress it down with a file or stone till it will close tight again. The receivers and bolt handles are soft to start with which is why they wear like they do, so not a lot of worry about losing temper doing the job (well... other than your own). Hope you can get it running .....catnip
I suppose this is possible. But my club's junior program Savage Mk I's have been used for years and MANY thousands of rounds and not one of them has worn to that point.
I'm going with the idea that the old oil or grease gummed up a little and it's slowing the firing pin. Adding pressure to the bolt's tail piece would "fix" this but so would a soak in some lacquer thinner and working the action and working the firing pin by holding the trigger while you close and open the bolt to #### and release it without letting it snap. Then drain it and let it dry and oil it lightly with some light body gun oil. Don't over do it as too much oil acts like a shock absorber and slows the snap of the pin. And it's that fast snap you need.