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Whats up with my Mosin Nagant?


Guest Straight Shooter

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Guest Straight Shooter

Had a problem pop up yesterday with a MN,and Id like you fellas thoughts please.

Ok,it was unfired by me,recently bought new,in cosmoline. Cleaned her up really nice,bore looks unfired.All matching numbers...real clean,sharp rifle.

Now,as I do all my weapons,Ive been dry firing it a lot. All a sudden yesterday,BEFORE any live fire had been done,the bolt became VERY VERY hard to open,after I would dry fire it. Im full aware of the sticky chamber/laquer ammo problem,this is not what Im talking about.

The bolt cycles very easily/smoothly while cocked,but drop the hammer on a empty chamber,and ita a mofo to open again. Ive felt aroung the chamber and feel no burrs or anything outta place,and a visual of same confirms that too.

So...thoughts and opinions on cause and remedy appreciated!!

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Guest Straight Shooter

Thanks guys...I assure all there is no cosmoline anywhere on the rifle. Bolt has been stripped three times now,including just now. Problem is getting worse. i know what it AINT:

1.Bolt is assembled correctly.

2.No cosmoline/laquer at all on weapon.

3.Nothing looks out of the ordinary.

So,Im still open to ideas as to why the bolt on this rifle is so hard to open after dry firing on an empty chamber.

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I am not doubting you at all on the cosmo thing.

have you shined a light down the chamber. It is possible there is cosmoline caked up against the face of the chamber. It may well appear to look like metal, but in reality is 50 year old cosmo sitting in there. Just a thought or a grasp at a straw.

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Guest Straight Shooter

Thanks for the suggestion Mike.357...but I SWEAR there aint no cosmoline on this rifle. And again,this problem just started Saturday,after me dry firing it for the past few weeks. Just out of the blue started.

Yes,Ive TRIPLE DOUBLE QUADRIPLE checked chamber,bolt WHOLE RIFLE and NO cosmoline.

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if you look down to the chamber you should see a notch in the face of it. My Mosin is buried in the safe and I am not digging it out but I believe the notch would be at about 1 or 2 oclock.(I might be way wrong about the postion of the notch but there is a notch.) I only mention cosmo there because a Mosin Nagant I previously owned was cosmo free( so I thought) and there was some cosmoline caked up like it was welded in place against the face of the chamber.

Maybe check these websites out.

7.62x54r.net

Mosin Nagant

I am out of ideas and information. Good luck

PS: Just thought of one other thing. The nob on the ass end of the bolt is adjustable. Is it possible this has slipped out of place. The first website I mentioned in this post probably has information in the nob and the proper position of it. Again grasping at straws for you.

Edited by Mike.357
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I dryfire mine but I use a spent case in the chamber. I know its impossible unless you shot it first....but I'm just sayin'.

...Anyway. Is your firing pin flush with the end of the bolt rear, where the scribe mark and firing pin threads line up? the only way I'd forsee any problems in bolt cycling is high spring tension, or if the cam is burred or the trigger doesn't reset forward enough where it binds under the bolt "carrier".

Is it just hard to open period (rotate the bolt upwards), or to pull it back after opening. It may be something simple like lube or technique. I read somewhere that using your left hand with the palm on the reciever and the fingers over the top of the bolt gets it done with almost no effort. That's apparently how the Soviet soldiers did it b/c the MN was mainly used as a trench rifle under supported positions....

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Guest Matchguy

Just one suggestion......Take the action out of the stock and make sure the large screw holding the trigger assembly in the action isn't loose and there are no broken parts in the trigger assembly. The trigger has to reset when you raise the bolt handle, so if something in the trigger is broken or reassembled incorrectly or left loose, it may not want to let the bolt reset it, which would make raising the bolt handle a real itchbay. You might even have a broken trigger spring, which I believe could cause hard bolt lift. Just a thought.

Jer

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Guest 70below

...Anyway. Is your firing pin flush with the end of the bolt rear, where the scribe mark and firing pin threads line up? the only way I'd forsee any problems in bolt cycling is high spring tension, or if the cam is burred or the trigger doesn't reset forward enough where it binds under the bolt "carrier".

Sounds to me like this. Either the spring is overly tensioned, or one end of the bolt is hanging up after the pin is dropped. Check the screw, and add a dab of gun grease to each end of the bolt.

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Guest 1817ak47

ok I just bought another mosin at the recnet show here. while cleaning the cosmo off I have gotten a coule of metal slivers in my skin. maybe you have one of those

but I thought about this post when I was cleaning the bolt on it and checking it's cycling. if the firing pin has been dropped(fired) when the bolt is opened it recocks the firing pin back into a ready to fire state. this will be easily observed by watching the part on the back of the bolt go in when the trigger is pulled, and when the bolt arm is pulled up the back of the bolt comes back.

if the bolt has been fully disasembled and cleaned, I would check for rough edges, burrs, metal slivers etc. the process of machin when these were made was not as refined as how things are made now in the 21st century.

hope this gives some good insight

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Guest Straight Shooter

PROBLEM SOLVED Gents...thanks to all who chimed in. I shot the rifle Sunday,came in and started cleaning it,took all apart and tried to see what was wrong. Apparently, I had overtightened the reciever screws,and the bolt was actually catching on the mag assembly,or something. Anyway,when I re-assembled it,all was well. And,yes,Ive seen those metal slivers on other MN's.So,dont cinch those reciever screws too tight!

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