Re: Savage first round fliers???
I would not recommend dry-firing the savage. Savage rimfires are supposed to have the firing pin vertical to match the line at the barrel, but I would not chance it. If it is the least bit out of alignment, it could dent the breech. Although there are some threads on the internet that say the its ok, the pin will be contacting the breech face instead of the brass. My luck it would not break while dry-firing, but while at the range and ruin my day. I do, however, dry-fire my centerfires all the time. I like to dry-fire 20-30 times at the range if I notice my groups are starting to open up after I have been there a while. Because, I know my rifle will shoot better than I can make it.
Not saying it cant be done, but I would not take the chance.
not a savage, but gives you an idea (think this is a browning)
found this on search, posted by Chad Dixon of LongRifles, Inc. 1/10/2011. I figure he knows a lot more about firearms than I probably ever will, so I take his advice. the post is here for reference:
http://www.snipershide.com/forum/ubbthreads.php?ubb=showflat&Number=2645398
Regarding rimfires:
CERTAIN rimfire actions are designed to be dry fired. The Anschutz 52 and 20 series actions being two that come to mind.
Feinwerkbau's, Bleikkers, Grunigs, Hammerli's, SeeHubber's, and Walthers are also designed like this.
I don't profess to know every 22 out there. Just the ones I've built/serviced/sold.
If the striker protrudes past the forward most face of the bolt, don't pull the trigger without a fired case in the chamber and/or a snap cap. If you do it will more than likely ding the breech and this will almost certainly kill accuracy to some degree. It'll wipe a big ol fat groove right down the driving band of the bullet.
There's no cardinal rules here. It depends on the design of the fire control.