The bedding on the 85 wooden stocks is very Heath Robinson and I bet they were the source of the reported 85 bedding issues.
Agreed - here it is, held in by two screws. What could possibly go wrong...
The bedding on the 85 wooden stocks is very Heath Robinson and I bet they were the source of the reported 85 bedding issues.
I think I read about some guys that had fixed it by changing the extractor claw for one that fitted better, something that should have been sorted in the offset. I think maybe SAKO addressed this later as I haven't heard much about it since.No myth. Too many of us have same experience. My 85 in 30.06 during normal bolt cycling would always throw spent case in a near vertical ejection arc that always struck the tiny Zeiss Duralyt windage turret. One in five ejections would fail to clear the rifle with the case settling in the action on top of the magazine. Others have experienced same. Even a cursory search on YT will find video evidence.
The primary reason why the 85 ejects more vertically is because the case ram rides in a slot machined between the lower two lugs in the 6 o'clock position. Sideways ejection is better garanteed by the ram being placed at an 8 o'clock position opposite the ejection port.
Why some 85s are worse than other? I have a theory based on observations of my rifle: when the spent case is being extracted, the case mouth hangs lower than the head and trails along the top of the magazine. I.e. the claw does not mate the case head to the bolt face but rather allows it to hang off it. That is because the boltface to claw distance far exceeds the width of the case rim. The net effect is that the case hangs off the bolt like a fag from Bogart's lip. As the bolt is drawn back the ejection ram strikes the case at 6 o'clock and thus causes the case to pivot about the only point of contact the claw is making which is close to 1 o'clock.
The net effect is that as the bolt is pulled backwards, the case first rises in a near vertical arc. A very short time later in the bolt retraction cycle, once the case is passes through the same axis as the bolt, the case rim also engages the lower part of the extraction claw. At this point, the sum of the reaction from the totality of the claw face is to try and throw the case more sideways.
Whether your 85 has a penchant for ejection that looks more like a moon shot than a frisbee chuck probably hinges on how loosely the case is held by the claw. I.e. how much vertical momentum is imparted before the sideways effect commences.
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I think I read about some guys that had fixed it by changing the extractor claw for one that fitted better, something that should have been sorted in the offset. I think maybe SAKO addressed this later as I haven't heard much about it since.
Mmm, I have a stainless 85 and a regularish 75, I have experienced absolutely no problems with the 85 ejecting but I do currently have a problem with the 75 sometimes refusing to eject the cartridge. I can draw the bolt back fully and the case remains stuck to the face of the bolt held in place by the extractor claw and refuses to jump off of the bolt face and out of the breech. This is a relatively new problem but does seem to have gotten worse recently. Guess im gonna have to take it to the smith to sort, but hoping its just a tired extractor claw that needs replacing.
A bloke in Queensland, Australia posted somewhere, 24hourcampfire maybe, about this. He made a new extractor claw with much tighter tolerances than the original. The new one held the case tight against the bolt face. Problem fixed. He was a machinist and had the knowhow and the tools to do this.I think I read about some guys that had fixed it by changing the extractor claw for one that fitted better, something that should have been sorted in the offset. I think maybe SAKO addressed this later as I haven't heard much about it since.
If this ejection issue is real, can anyone say whether mounting a picatinny rail would help or exacerbate the issue?