Had a little time on my hands so I thought I would try an experiment.
** Always follow the advice to never chamber a round from anywhere other than the magazine on an M305, M14s, M1A, etc. **
I took some sized 308 brass, loaded it up with soft Federal primers, no propellant, no projectile. Ear muffs and eye protection on.
First, I placed the primed brass in the magazine of my m14s, pulled back the bolt as far as it would go, and let it go. I then drew the charging handle back and inspected the primer on the brass. Not so much as a trace of a firing pin indent.
Now, for the cardinal sin. I first placed said piece of primed brass into the chamber fully. Magazine out so as not to contact the bolt catch. Then I drew back the charging handle as far as it would go it let er rip. No bang. Extracted the cartridge and inspected the primer. Once again, not even a trace of an impact with the firing pin.
The gun fires just fine when I want it to. The bolt and firing pin are clean, as is the chamber. So these are ideal conditions. But, I was expecting a bang.
I tried this with the same piece of brass 15 times in a row, no bang.
By the 10th time, there was a small mark, a pin prick of a mark forming in the center of the primer.
I will repeat this experiment with a purposely high seated primer and report back.
Part 2 High primer
Repeated the experiment, dropping the bolt on a sized case placed in the chamber, using a Federal primer, seated only half way into the primer pocket.
First drop, no bang. Primer exhibits slight mark, similar to attempt #10 above.
Nine more tries, no bang. Primer fully seated by the process of dropping the bolt onto it.
Seems to me its not easy to recreate a slam fire, even with soft Federal primers. There is no where near the striking force on the primer by the inertia of the firing pin alone to detonate it. It would likely require a frozen firing pin. But, given the design of the safety bridge, I am not sure how a firing pin frozen in the forward position can make it past the safety bridge.
By the way, this rifle has headspacing of .002 over saami. Much tighter than a typical Norinco M305.
** Always follow the advice to never chamber a round from anywhere other than the magazine on an M305, M14s, M1A, etc. **
I took some sized 308 brass, loaded it up with soft Federal primers, no propellant, no projectile. Ear muffs and eye protection on.
First, I placed the primed brass in the magazine of my m14s, pulled back the bolt as far as it would go, and let it go. I then drew the charging handle back and inspected the primer on the brass. Not so much as a trace of a firing pin indent.
Now, for the cardinal sin. I first placed said piece of primed brass into the chamber fully. Magazine out so as not to contact the bolt catch. Then I drew back the charging handle as far as it would go it let er rip. No bang. Extracted the cartridge and inspected the primer. Once again, not even a trace of an impact with the firing pin.
The gun fires just fine when I want it to. The bolt and firing pin are clean, as is the chamber. So these are ideal conditions. But, I was expecting a bang.
I tried this with the same piece of brass 15 times in a row, no bang.
By the 10th time, there was a small mark, a pin prick of a mark forming in the center of the primer.
I will repeat this experiment with a purposely high seated primer and report back.
Part 2 High primer
Repeated the experiment, dropping the bolt on a sized case placed in the chamber, using a Federal primer, seated only half way into the primer pocket.
First drop, no bang. Primer exhibits slight mark, similar to attempt #10 above.
Nine more tries, no bang. Primer fully seated by the process of dropping the bolt onto it.
Seems to me its not easy to recreate a slam fire, even with soft Federal primers. There is no where near the striking force on the primer by the inertia of the firing pin alone to detonate it. It would likely require a frozen firing pin. But, given the design of the safety bridge, I am not sure how a firing pin frozen in the forward position can make it past the safety bridge.
By the way, this rifle has headspacing of .002 over saami. Much tighter than a typical Norinco M305.
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