I have a nicely redone BSA/P14 which a prev. owner also glass-bedded and added a Timney trigger to. Nice and accurate- around 1.25" @ 100m. However, it doesn't like feeding from a full magazine (5rds.)
With Winchester 180gn Powerpoints it will feed the first round with a little grumbling, the remaining four are fine. Handloads with Woodleigh 174gn @ 3.065" will not feed the first round; it seems to hang up on the right of the receiver. The remaining four feed OK. Loaded with Remington 180 gn RN to 2.94" it is distinctly unhappy. It jams the first round and isn't to happy about the second. I have yet to try the Frontier 174 gn. FP but I expect they would be similar to the Remingtons. All these handloads are in once-fired brass, neck-sized only.
I see a pattern here: the "spitzier" the bullet the better it feeds, not surprising since the WWI military round was a spitzer. (The barrel is marked "215" bullet, though, like the original .303 ammo; a bit surprising since I think the 215 gn. load was discontinued for military use by the time the P-14 was built. And wasn't it a round nose?)
However, rounds 1 & 3 both load from the right side of the magazine, and round 3 is OK, so its this a spring pressure issue? As far as I can see, both rounds 1 & 3 seem to be at the same angle, but there could be a subtle difference which is causing the first round to hang up. The follower is pretty close to the bottom off the magazine with 5 rds. in it, but there is a little room left.
I could just load 4 rds. of Woodleigh but obviously I would like to get it to feed others reliably, if that is possible. I am also thinking of having it rechambered to .303 Epps, but that is a secondary project.
Has anyone out there had the same problem... and solved it?
Stuart
With Winchester 180gn Powerpoints it will feed the first round with a little grumbling, the remaining four are fine. Handloads with Woodleigh 174gn @ 3.065" will not feed the first round; it seems to hang up on the right of the receiver. The remaining four feed OK. Loaded with Remington 180 gn RN to 2.94" it is distinctly unhappy. It jams the first round and isn't to happy about the second. I have yet to try the Frontier 174 gn. FP but I expect they would be similar to the Remingtons. All these handloads are in once-fired brass, neck-sized only.
I see a pattern here: the "spitzier" the bullet the better it feeds, not surprising since the WWI military round was a spitzer. (The barrel is marked "215" bullet, though, like the original .303 ammo; a bit surprising since I think the 215 gn. load was discontinued for military use by the time the P-14 was built. And wasn't it a round nose?)
However, rounds 1 & 3 both load from the right side of the magazine, and round 3 is OK, so its this a spring pressure issue? As far as I can see, both rounds 1 & 3 seem to be at the same angle, but there could be a subtle difference which is causing the first round to hang up. The follower is pretty close to the bottom off the magazine with 5 rds. in it, but there is a little room left.
I could just load 4 rds. of Woodleigh but obviously I would like to get it to feed others reliably, if that is possible. I am also thinking of having it rechambered to .303 Epps, but that is a secondary project.
Has anyone out there had the same problem... and solved it?