Thanks for the reply. I'm going to have to use the vice and some brass "jaws" on the pliers to keep from marring the material. Hope you're right.... (So the bolt-face end and the rear-end are screwed together on a right-hand thread?)
yes right hand threads. Spray some penetrating oil down the rear side of the bolt handle and let sit for a while to help. The front piece screws into the rear piece. Also,while holding the front part of the bolt in the vise turn the bolt handle as if you were closing it in the gun. This will take the pressure off the firing pin spring. The bolt handle will move freely when this is done.
thanks for the advice. I got it apart as described. Had to do some gentle persuasion with the punch to get the firing pin to slide out, and the extractors were challenging but it's apart, the ultrasound is churning away all the gunk now, and when it's out, dried, lubed, and all, I'll polish the cocking surface a little, polish the sides of the firing pin a little to make it move a little more freely, and get it back together. Whee!
Other topic
There seems to be a little leaf spring of some kind missing - which would keep pressure on the bases of the four different sight posts - It seems that it should fit under the sight (between the sight and the barrel) and put a little upward pressure on a bit of spring-steel that's in there. I've wedged a bit of brass (from a .308 case) in there to do something, but it's not right. How to find (or make) a spring? (Have a bit of spring steel that I'm going to work away on, heat, bend, harden, temper, blue, and maybe even have it work...)
Ah. Wow. Mine's missing a bunch of stuff.
`I think some people were using the metal spring banding that shippers tie things down to a crate with.
Look to Havlin sales for Mossberg parts.
I'm working all weekend (and all week last week and the next two weeks) without break - such is coaching. If the bits and pieces are available at the show I'd very much appreciate you picking one up for me.
Cheers,
W



























