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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Rifles, Bullets, Barrels & Ballistics
Alamo Precision?
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<blockquote data-quote="John 264" data-source="post: 1824035" data-attributes="member: 110440"><p>yes I do have 20+ years of experience building rifles... and I apologize for questioning your engineer degree I thought that someone with a degree would understand how a rifle works and the relation of the bolt lugs and the reciever lug seat being square with each other and having proper lug contact so the bolt doesn't rock back under recoil... the only way to properly test your bolt play is with the trigger in the rifle.. im assuming what you are meaning by the trigger "pushing up on the bolt" you are talking about the tension between th he sear and the cocking piece holding the firing pin in the cocked position... that still doesnt explain why your bolt had almost zero contact on one lug... anyone that builds quality rifles knows that you need as close to 100% contact as you can... but i guess your rifles are that good that they only need 70% contact on 1 lug.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="John 264, post: 1824035, member: 110440"] yes I do have 20+ years of experience building rifles... and I apologize for questioning your engineer degree I thought that someone with a degree would understand how a rifle works and the relation of the bolt lugs and the reciever lug seat being square with each other and having proper lug contact so the bolt doesn't rock back under recoil... the only way to properly test your bolt play is with the trigger in the rifle.. im assuming what you are meaning by the trigger "pushing up on the bolt" you are talking about the tension between th he sear and the cocking piece holding the firing pin in the cocked position... that still doesnt explain why your bolt had almost zero contact on one lug... anyone that builds quality rifles knows that you need as close to 100% contact as you can... but i guess your rifles are that good that they only need 70% contact on 1 lug. [/QUOTE]
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Alamo Precision?
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