I've tried to ask Rossi this question over the phone but I was told "send it in". I've seen two other stainless 92s like this, but some blued ones I've seen do NOT do this.
I have a new R92 in .44/stainless/16" barrel. Out of the box, when the lever is closed, the bolt moves forward normally, then stops when all the mortises are aligned. The two locking lugs move up and lock the bolt to the receiver, the lever clicks into place and all seems well. However, when I squeeze the lever more it will still go up a bit, the two lugs move up a bit more, and the bolt goes forward until it contacts the chamber, about 1/3mm perhaps. The problem is that now the bolt isn't resting on the locking lugs anymore - there is a tiny space between the front of the lugs and the rear of the bolt mortises. My concern is that when the gun is fired, it likely causes the bolt to slam back and impact the lugs, increasing stress. I've handled a blued rifle where the lever closes and clicks into position, and if you squeeze it more the bolt doesn't go forward any more, presumably because it is contacting the barrel.
Has anyone else seen this in a 92? I thought I'd ask here as I've heard it can take 6 months to get warranty service on a Rossi, and considering the rarity of the stainless trappers, I suspect that's what I'd be looking at. Thanks for your time.
B
I have a new R92 in .44/stainless/16" barrel. Out of the box, when the lever is closed, the bolt moves forward normally, then stops when all the mortises are aligned. The two locking lugs move up and lock the bolt to the receiver, the lever clicks into place and all seems well. However, when I squeeze the lever more it will still go up a bit, the two lugs move up a bit more, and the bolt goes forward until it contacts the chamber, about 1/3mm perhaps. The problem is that now the bolt isn't resting on the locking lugs anymore - there is a tiny space between the front of the lugs and the rear of the bolt mortises. My concern is that when the gun is fired, it likely causes the bolt to slam back and impact the lugs, increasing stress. I've handled a blued rifle where the lever closes and clicks into position, and if you squeeze it more the bolt doesn't go forward any more, presumably because it is contacting the barrel.
Has anyone else seen this in a 92? I thought I'd ask here as I've heard it can take 6 months to get warranty service on a Rossi, and considering the rarity of the stainless trappers, I suspect that's what I'd be looking at. Thanks for your time.
B