Stripping bolt.
ya.. also ensure the bolt is not cocked.
X 2. That is the key step, rotate the bolt handle so the center of the safety is in line with a curved recess in the rear end of the bolt handle and the striker drops to uncocked position. Then when you depress the takedown button the safety will lift right out. When re-assembling, as a last step grip the bolt body and rotate the bolt handle back to cocked position before putting it back in the receiver.
Now that I have had a really good look at it I'll report on what I notice.
The stock is well finished, no complaints. The surface finish on the barrel and receiver is quite good but the machining on the back end of the receiver is rough, I had to remover burrs and sharp edges. The safety was badly fitted and very stiff, the knob end of the safety was filed to a rounded point that really didn't even fit the safety notch properly so I reshaped and polished both bearing surfaces and now it works fine. The back end of the striker was very rough, just a crude filed finish so I polished it with fine emery cloth while I had the bolt apart. The mag didn't drop free or slide in smoothly so I carefully filed down the ends of the rivets and knocked off all sharp edges, it work perfectly now. The bolt body is reasonably well finished, the extractors look well made and the rifle feeds, fires, extracts and ejects perfectly.
The front sight was just slapped in, way off to one side, once sighted in the blade was centered on the ramp. My rifle shoots way low for the sight settings. I had to set the sight to 125 to zero at 25 yds and 150 to zero at 50 yards. I may have to file down the front sight blade but I think I'll try a rubber pad as a pressure point at the front of the barrel channel before I decide to file the sight down.
Overall what do I think? Cool looking, working well now with just a bit of effort. Is it worth $99 plus shipping and taxes ($140)? Absolutely. Would I pay $200 plus taxes and shipping? Not a chance.