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How dirty is it? Is the bolt and inner receiver well lubricated? Are either showing signs of galling? Perhaps the slot in the receiver is galled, or the bolt handle where it rides in the receiver is the culprit. Pics would help tremendously.....
try pushing he bolt in and out by using the cocking piece-- first with the trigger in its rest position then with the trigger pulled if it catches when the trigger is not pulled then the pivot is pushing the bolt out of line and catching the sear and the gun is trying to become a self cocker and with that little of engagement its very unsafe to use with ammunition. Looked at my 1955 cooey and there is a considerable bevel on the top of the pivoted portion of the sear to prevent it from catching the cocking portion of the bolt until the cocking piece is pulled fully back to ####. The problem with these cooeys is the long trigger pull and the difficulty to improve this and keep the gun free of accidental firing. The other problem I've seen is that the bolt handle is loose where it joins the bolt body and it physically twists and wedges itself in the slot, hopes this helps art