NOpe.
When I assembled the rifle I did a few checks.
Firstly after lapping and cleaning the bolt, I placed into receiver and checked for clearances. Roller to side of receiver and bottom of the receiver had about .020" - 0.025" clearance all round. The bolt did not wiggle to much, but I checked clearance by pushing right lug to receiver and then the left lug to ensure no contact. I also measured the headspace clearance with the go gauge and that was approximately .001".
Next, I only assembled the bolt and op rod (no spring) to check for tolerances and binding and/or tightness. Pressing the op rod tight to the receiver (bolt closed position) the bolt was not tight in any direction and wiggled freely. That included the roller as well, it was not tight. As a comparison, I checked it against the Norky bolt and while there was less wiggle, there was no binding and the bolt moved freely. I then relaxed the pressure against the op rod, and again, no binding or tightness of any sort.
I then slowly pulled back on the op rod and tested the bolt movement along it's travel, one with the op rod tight against the receiver and the other more relaxed. While I did notice the bolt shift in the receiver, there was no binding. The bolt got tighter (relatively speaking) toward the rear of the receiver, but no binding of any sort. I did however notice when firing that there were a few misfeeds, in that the bolt seemed to be moving quite hard once a mag with dummy rounds was inserted. The bottom of the bolt shows that contact was being made with the casings throughout travel. I chalked it up to a magazine issue. In hindsight, I compared the two bolt diameters at the "rub" spot. The Norky was 0.572" and the 7.62 was 0.626". That explained the energy loss from the action which caused the misfeeds.
At all times, again, the bolt moved freely without magazine, but it was tighter in comparison than the Norky bolt both in "wiggle" and when chambered with resized dummy rounds.