I know my at was heavier than the 3 ae's I've owned, but it wasn't that heavy. I always put a dab of grease on cocking ramp, primary extraction area of bolt handle, and on lugs.
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Join the contest SubscribeIs this a new or used gun? Have you ensured the striker assembly and cocking cam are lubed? How’s the cocking cam look, is it smooth and shiny, or scored/galled? If all is in order, contact Mile High and see what they can do. My bolt lift is 6lbs, and should have the same components as yours. Something isn’t right.
If Remington abandons it or screws it up you know it’s good.
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Learn something everyday. Does this apply to other actions that have bayonet type bolt take down like badger and bighorn?Lube here too. View attachment 7379871
View attachment 7379862
Grease the red parts: each lug(6) on back and ramp, cocking piece/cocking piece ramp, and the primary extraction cam surface/top front bolt handle.
Lube here too. View attachment 7379871
All actions need lube there whether it’s bayonet style or threads like a Remington. In the case of the bayonet style though, there’s not much surface area there, so lube will matter more.Learn something everyday. Does this apply to other actions that have bayonet type bolt take down like badger and bighorn?
I’ve never bought in to that theory. I can’t say that I’ve ever run into an assembly that just wouldn’t work properly due to lube on sheer surfaces. I can’t count the number of times I’ve seen under lubed surfaces with excessive wear, regardless of age. Metal on metal contact with high shear loads deserves lube imo.Youve got 2 options. Lube and grease the places that have been mentioned, or run it dry, breaking everything in by dry firing/shooting many cycles, THEN lubing. The surfaces wont really break in if they are greased. As far as what lube to go with, i have found that full synthetic motor oil works great on backs of lugs, then brake grease on the points that were mentioned.
I wish I were better set up to test these type of things. I sent my AT back to AINA last week to have the bolt replaced due to a messed up safety. My previous bolt was well used and felt great. Would've been neat to take a few measurements with the old one before sending it off.
ETA* Wonder what they'll think when they open the box and see it's in an MPA chassis lol.
Dirty little secret....I love my harris bipods![]()
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I’ve never bought in to that theory. I can’t say that I’ve ever run into an assembly that just wouldn’t work properly due to lube on sheer surfaces. I can’t count the number of times I’ve seen under lubed surfaces with excessive wear, regardless of age. Metal on metal contact with high shear loads deserves lube imo.
i think you might be misunderstanding what i meant. Im not saying you HAVE to lube the surfaces. Im saying that if a new bolt is lubed, it wont "break in" like a non lubed surface. If a bolt is lubed, it wont wear in b/c the surfaces wont get proper friction, if that makes sense. I have run my bolt lubed and dry. you can def feel a difference. Jacob Bynums AW is probably the most broke in AI on the planet. I'd bet to say his AW dry has much lighter bolt lift than a new one with lube. I lube mine before every match with brake grease and motor oil. Feels much smoother on lift and close.
Did it ever smooth out? Or find a solution? I got an atx and it's probably my worst feeling action. Very heavy lift and binds up if not pushed perfectly straight forward.I just got my new AT, super excited. the bolt cycles smooth as butter, but find my bolt lift is extremely heavy. I don't know if that's just me or it's how AI rifles are.
I know that they're not light, but I feel mine's unusually heavy. But I never got my hands on another AI before. Base on all the videos I watched on youtube. they all seems lighter than mine.
I would see them put their thumb on top of the stock and use top side of the index finger to open up the bolt with not much effort. some use two fingers(index&middle) slightly lift up the bolt. they look smooth, nice and slow. I couldn't do either of those with my AT. I would need to use my whole hand to hold the knob to open that bolt with so much effort.
Have anyone test the bolt lifting weight with a trigger gauge? How heavy is yours?
Thanks in advance for any input!!!
About the binding, I’d call AI, personally. That seems off and is not like my AT or AX.Did it ever smooth out? Or find a solution? I got an atx and it's probably my worst feeling action. Very heavy lift and binds up if not pushed perfectly straight forward.
Oh yeah, thx to @Supersubes and @6brshooter for the graphic above. See here and here.About the binding, I’d call AI, personally. That seems off and is not like my AT or AX.
AI bolt lift is heavy, however. That’s just how it is.
Two things to mitigate:
Knife-hand plus thumb on shroud technique:
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Accuracy International AT-XC
Ok, 6.5cm and .308 versions, no future currently with .223. No chassis system and eventual LE/Mil only on AT. AT-XC LE/MIL status? Mile High?www.snipershide.com
And make sure you lube red and circled blue areas.
View attachment 8438986
If you use that same technique but put your thumb on TOP of the bolt shroud (instead of behind it) you may find your leverage increases even further.Just put your thumb on the chassis behind bolt, and outstretch hand under bolt knob, like you gonna judo chop.