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Hunting
Long Range Hunting & Shooting
A Problem With ALL Ruger American centerfire rifles
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<blockquote data-quote="George Dean" data-source="post: 1396948" data-attributes="member: 102703"><p>I suggest that you locate another owner of that rifle, in the same caliber and try their bolt in your rifle and your bolt in theirs. It seems to me that some surface is not camming properly--unsat tension? It could be at the rear of the bolt & handle or in the cocking mechanism for the firing pin. Checking against another system may reveal a flaw in your bolt, the bolts lugs, your receiver or as you suspect, the Ruger design for that rifle model.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="George Dean, post: 1396948, member: 102703"] I suggest that you locate another owner of that rifle, in the same caliber and try their bolt in your rifle and your bolt in theirs. It seems to me that some surface is not camming properly--unsat tension? It could be at the rear of the bolt & handle or in the cocking mechanism for the firing pin. Checking against another system may reveal a flaw in your bolt, the bolts lugs, your receiver or as you suspect, the Ruger design for that rifle model. [/QUOTE]
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A Problem With ALL Ruger American centerfire rifles
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