Anschutz trigger-guard screw

AikiNut

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GunNutz
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So.. a friend has an Anschutz .22 that he inherited from his brother. He's going to dig through his safe just in case the screw fell out there, but he's presently missing a screw for the trigger guard. The screw goes through the stock to the receiver. Are these a particularly hard thing to find? (I have used WGP several times in the past). Sorry, I don't (yet) know the model of the Annie but will have it in my hot little hands soon - he wants me to see if I can fix the bolt (or at least diagnose the problem) in exchange for doing some TIG for me.
 
Nordic Marksman. If it goes thru the trigger guard, stock and into the receiver. They're called bedding screws.

It be the rear one if it's a 64 action. They're M4 screws.

But be easier to find out once you get the model.
 
Ok. It's an Anschutz, made in Ulm, Deutschland, marked CIL Model 180. The front trigger-guard screw is what's missing. I've taken it apart, and that front trigger guard screw is just a blued, countersunk wood screw - need to find that. The rear trigger guard screw goes through to the receiver. The bolt seems to come apart too easily, but it wouldn't go into the receiver because it was un-cocked - a little twist and away we go - working rifle. EDIT: it seems there's spring-loaded detent-pin in the bolt body that keeps the bolt-face/extractor part of the bolt from spinning freely - need to source that. will look for exploded drawings of anschutz/cil 180 bolts... Part numbers 5a and 8 seem to be missing (a spring and a short pin, respectively)

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180 and 64 are the same action and bolt.

Just different barrel, stock and trigger assembly.

Give Brad a call. Im sure he has those screws for the old stamped trigger guards.
 
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the chance that the bolt body is worn out is possible not a very good system it does not stand up to 10'ooo's of firing great little rifles when working
 
Thanks for the replies. I've ordered 5a from the picture above. Someone must have turned the bolt a little too far and let the little pin go for a trip across the room when the front bolt body came off. It looks like the front screw on the trigger guard is a blued steel wood screw - now - to find a rounded head, countersunk, slot head wood screw about #8, and cold blue it...
 
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