If you're too cheap to buy a reprint of the Manual from Abbey Press on Fleabay and GunBroker.com, start with two bolts: one to dismantle; the other to use as a comparison when you finish reassembling the first one. Push the cocking-piece to the back of the bolt with your thumb, and rotate it so it doesn't pop back in. Push the fat little transverse pin holding the firing pin to the cocking-piece out, then just extract the bolt itself from the front. Going in to the spring? Be careful backing out the locking nut, as when it comes out, there's still spring pressure behind it, and the tiny toothed washer inside will automatically fly to the least-accessible part of your workshop, never to be seen again. Now that you have it apart, do you know why you wanted to do it in the first place? Do what you need/want to do, then slip it all back together. When you're pretty sure you've done it right, just compare it to the bolt you set aside as a known-correct sample, before putting it back in your rifle.Final check? Look at the gas vent in the bolt-head with the bolt fully back...if it'd pointing straight up at you, you're all done.