Hello. The above stated issue is with a friend of mines rifle. He ordered the rifle new about 7-8 years ago. It was a rather expensive production rifle, and he topped it with a NF NSX scope with a NF 1-piece mount. He spent a pretty good amount on this shooting package, and had problems shortly thereafter.
He was telling me that he was having extraction issues with factory ammo. I told him we could try hand loading for it to see if maybe he just had too tight of a chamber for factory ammo.
Well, after trying Sierra 300gr SMk’s and Badlands 260gr SICBM’s, H1000, H4891, and Retumbo, we determined there was something wrong with the rifle, and not the ammunition. I tried a load ladder with each bullet and each powder. So lots of different loads were tried.
We were seeing stuck cases in 4 out of 5, or 5 out 6 shots. The bolt wasn’t “heavy” and there weren’t any real signs of pressure on the brass, but the bolt needed to be smacked with a block of wood or a mallet.
My friend sent it back to Savage for warranty work. Savage said they “rechambered and polished the barrel.” And then test fired it. It functioned fine according to them.
Upon receiving the rifle back, I tried five rounds of ammo loaded with 86.0gr of H1000 and 300gr SMK’s. All but one of them stuck in the chamber. So much for Savage’s repair work and test firing.
I looked online for what could be the culprit, and there was nothing really out there for a “sticky bolt.” Well, when I looked up primary extraction issues with Savage rifles, there came the info.
Apparently the larger caliber Savage rifles are somewhat prone to having primary extraction issues. There was talk about drilling, tapping, and installing set screws in the rear baffle, machining down the back of the bolt, and a few other things.
I needed to test for this as being the issue.
I loaded a load ladder with 300gr Berger OTM’s (because we ran out of SMK’s) and 81.0 - 85.0gr of H1000. I used a set of feeler gauges to see what the gap was between the back of the receiver and the rear baffle. I was able to fit 0.034” of feeler gauges in the gap. Essentially the bolt body is about 0.030-0.035” too long. This gap was prohibiting effective primary extraction.
I used the feeler gauge at the range as a makeshift shim to force the bolt handle against the rear baffle, and every round extracted flawlessly at all charge weights.
Another friend of mine is a very good machinist. He made me a 0.035” shim with the footprint of the rear baffle. I wanted to try something a little better than a feeler gauge to make sure I had it all figured out.
I did I another load ladder with the shim, and the rifle functioned great.
My machinist friend is going to machine the bolt body down about 0.030” at first to make sure we do not overdo it.
This extraction issue has been a pain for many months now. It feels great to have finally figured it out. (Hopefully)
He was telling me that he was having extraction issues with factory ammo. I told him we could try hand loading for it to see if maybe he just had too tight of a chamber for factory ammo.
Well, after trying Sierra 300gr SMk’s and Badlands 260gr SICBM’s, H1000, H4891, and Retumbo, we determined there was something wrong with the rifle, and not the ammunition. I tried a load ladder with each bullet and each powder. So lots of different loads were tried.
We were seeing stuck cases in 4 out of 5, or 5 out 6 shots. The bolt wasn’t “heavy” and there weren’t any real signs of pressure on the brass, but the bolt needed to be smacked with a block of wood or a mallet.
My friend sent it back to Savage for warranty work. Savage said they “rechambered and polished the barrel.” And then test fired it. It functioned fine according to them.
Upon receiving the rifle back, I tried five rounds of ammo loaded with 86.0gr of H1000 and 300gr SMK’s. All but one of them stuck in the chamber. So much for Savage’s repair work and test firing.
I looked online for what could be the culprit, and there was nothing really out there for a “sticky bolt.” Well, when I looked up primary extraction issues with Savage rifles, there came the info.
Apparently the larger caliber Savage rifles are somewhat prone to having primary extraction issues. There was talk about drilling, tapping, and installing set screws in the rear baffle, machining down the back of the bolt, and a few other things.
I needed to test for this as being the issue.
I loaded a load ladder with 300gr Berger OTM’s (because we ran out of SMK’s) and 81.0 - 85.0gr of H1000. I used a set of feeler gauges to see what the gap was between the back of the receiver and the rear baffle. I was able to fit 0.034” of feeler gauges in the gap. Essentially the bolt body is about 0.030-0.035” too long. This gap was prohibiting effective primary extraction.
I used the feeler gauge at the range as a makeshift shim to force the bolt handle against the rear baffle, and every round extracted flawlessly at all charge weights.
Another friend of mine is a very good machinist. He made me a 0.035” shim with the footprint of the rear baffle. I wanted to try something a little better than a feeler gauge to make sure I had it all figured out.
I did I another load ladder with the shim, and the rifle functioned great.
My machinist friend is going to machine the bolt body down about 0.030” at first to make sure we do not overdo it.
This extraction issue has been a pain for many months now. It feels great to have finally figured it out. (Hopefully)