Never said tweek or tune, all I said are they cleaning out the channels before using the gun? But whos gonna public ally admit they didn't. So your saying you have experience and that grease in the firing pin hole wont cause it to slam fire, but now saying that it can.
All I'm saying try cleaning the channel and take it for a shoot, if that doesn't solve it, then yes return it. But don't automatically assume its broken. Without knowing the WHOLE picture.
How could the firing pin remain stuck forward with grease or debris or whatnot when it's mechanically retracted by the safety bridge as the bolt closes?
Thats if it retracts, dirt and #### does wonders to things. Love how everybody jumps to its defected, return it, when first solution would be to clean it. What do I know.
How could the firing pin remain stuck forward with grease or debris or whatnot when it's mechanically retracted by the safety bridge as the bolt closes?
Thats if it retracts, dirt and #### does wonders to things. Love how everybody jumps to its defected, return it, when first solution would be to clean it. What do I know.
Unless I misunderstand the interaction between the bolt, firing pin and safety bridge, if the firing pin is jammed forward that tightly wouldn't the bolt then fail to rotate into battery at all?
edit - thanks 45ACPKING, that's what I thought.
Bingo.
Assuming that the safety bridge works, grease/cosmo clogging shouldn't make it repeatedly "and consistantly" fire with one squeeze of trigger.
It screams of a trigger issue OR a safety bridge issue.
But who knows.... So send it back
A quick FYI
M1a’s, M1 Garand's, M1 Carbines, and Mini 14’s have the same bolt firing pin receiver bridge configuration. On these rifles the firing pin is not retracted until cam is down. Prior to then the free floating firing pin is free to strike the primer.
This is the point at which the firing pin tang engages the receiver bridge. The firing pin is fully forward and able to engage the primer.
Lot's of theories yes.
Thanx for the lessons The Baby Wolf
I've come to the conclusion that I should just stay away from offering advice hehehe a decade building , tuning , repairing , customizing and shooting many 100's of these rifles coupled with instructing some 27 ish M14 clinics..... Really doesn't count for much when giving advice about a problem on the internet. LOL
Where's tactical teacher's advice to the OP's question.... Paging Barney.... His response will be more widely accepted I know![]()
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Lot's of theories yes.
Thanx for the lessons The Baby Wolf
I've come to the conclusion that I should just stay away from offering advice hehehe a decade building , tuning , repairing , customizing and shooting many 100's of these rifles coupled with instructing some 27 ish M14 clinics..... Really doesn't count for much when giving advice about a problem on the internet. LOL
Where's tactical teacher's advice to the OP's question.... Paging Barney.... His response will be more widely accepted I know![]()
![]()
so if your sooo educated on these, Why didn't you question the cleanliness of the bolt ( knowing that it can pay a factor ) That what a tech or someone with knowlege would asked first, yet quick to say return it.
Not bashing so don't take it to heart, a tech talking to a tech. That would be the first question I would ask if someone came up to me with this problem.
To be honest this should not be a factor with a brand new rifle....dirt usually builds up with use..
M305 are packed in oil not grease.....so that cant be an issue....
Brand new rifle, still under warranty....correct advice was given.
(dont see your dad on here much anymore)
the grease in the firing pin hole isn't gonna cause doubling, tripling, quadrupling, quintupling LOL or whatever.
seriously, take it back, end of story...
next question?




























