Claven2 said:
That is the stupidest thing I've ever heard Mauser98. What moron stalks cape buffalo with a round chambered but the bolt not turned down? Or worse yet, with an empty chamber?
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It is not the first shot that is the issue. It is the reloading under pressure. People have been known to short stroke the rifle in different ways,
-fire then draw the bolt back half way then move the bolt forward and slam the empty brass back into the chamber,
-fire then draw the bolt back and insert a new cartrige, then without closing the bolt handle draw the bolt back a secone time and try to put another round in the chamber
I almost short stroked a lever action one time. I fired at a bear, missing it with my first shot, fired again hitting it. Then for some reason when I tryed to shoot a third shot my arm was so pumped up and tense I drew the lever down and my arm only went down half way. I almost started to close the lever on the already fired brass but caught my mistake and forced (honestly took a lot of mental fortitude) my arm all the way down ejecting the brass.
I always load up my rounds in the rifle I am going to hunt with and work the action as hard as possible, you would be suprised how many jams you will get doing this. If your feed ramp is not smooth, the round loaded to a bad over all leanght or round nose bullets are used you will often find the round jams in mag (just below the feed ramp) I have done this test on many rifles. the rifles I have got to jam or miss feed are
-Winchester CRF short action 308 (I increased over all leanght and rifle feed good after)
-Ruger push feed/CRF this is one of the odd ball Rugers manufactured durning the switch from PF to CRF (Switched from Fed 130g factory to Winchester 130PP factory ammo and it fed good)
-Mauser 48 (mag follower spring is too weak, round will not be pushed up high enough bolt sides over top of round)
-Parker hale 30-06 (detatchable mag catch would let mag hang down to low bolt would slip over top of shell)
-Ruger 416 rigby (round nose bullets would jam on feed ramp also by working the bolt quickly the soft Norma brass would push the small sholder of the case back and the brass would get stuck in the chamber)
The most likely reason you are going to have a jam up or fail to feed is
#1 You gun (dosent matter what name is stamped on the side) does not work well with the ammo you are using when bolt is cycled rapidly
#2 You screw up and don't use your gun correctly due the ass pucker factor you are experiencing.