HonestJohn
Well-Known Member
His coils look quite wide and thin compared to yours, so might be the same pressure, although, length is indeed different.
Many things been mentioned already, but revisit: locking lug recesses are very clean, action screws are not over tight or loose, bolt internals have been cleaned with brake cleaner and parts very lightly lubricated. Are you testing this with a dummy round or spent case, or empty chamber? I believe with an empty chamber they can feel quite hard for xyz reason.
How is the bolt lift with firing pin and cocking pin removed?
Try removing the trigger group to ensure it’s not the trigger sear that’s got a problem, making it hard for the cocking piece to push back over the trigger main sear. Dirt or a faulty spring could cause this.
With a Mauser, the wrong cocking piece to trigger sear can literally block the bolt from lifting, camming and opening.
Many things been mentioned already, but revisit: locking lug recesses are very clean, action screws are not over tight or loose, bolt internals have been cleaned with brake cleaner and parts very lightly lubricated. Are you testing this with a dummy round or spent case, or empty chamber? I believe with an empty chamber they can feel quite hard for xyz reason.
How is the bolt lift with firing pin and cocking pin removed?
Try removing the trigger group to ensure it’s not the trigger sear that’s got a problem, making it hard for the cocking piece to push back over the trigger main sear. Dirt or a faulty spring could cause this.
With a Mauser, the wrong cocking piece to trigger sear can literally block the bolt from lifting, camming and opening.

