I have us made modern Winchester 1894 in 38-55. Been shooting fine until now. After about 10 rounds the loaded cartridge didn’t fire, tried another , same thing. I noticed the primer strike was very lite. Would this possibly be a broken firing pin?
Thanks,
Rich
Lite primer strike
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- Levergunner
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- Scott Tschirhart
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Re: Lite primer strike
I’ve not seen a broken firing pin in a Model 94. But it is possible for there to be problems with a dirty firing pin channel. I believe that the firing pins in these are a two piece type.
A complete disassembly of the bolt and locking block will show you the cause.
A complete disassembly of the bolt and locking block will show you the cause.
Re: Lite primer strike
Yep - you MIGHT be able to use some brake-cleaning fluid or WD-40 or whatever to spray right into the firing-pin hole in the bolt-face, and see if that helps.Scott Tschirhart wrote: ↑Sun Jun 15, 2025 6:47 amA complete disassembly of the bolt and locking block will show you the cause.
But if it doesn't you'll need to disassemble it to figure out what's going on, and even if it does help, it is an indication you should probably do a more thorough disassembly and cleaning, although it might at least get the gun functional in the meantime.
I am considering drilling a hole in my Ruger 96/22's bolt from the right side (visible when action closed) to the firing pin channel, the diameter of a WD-40 straw, because the gun is integrally suppressed, and get a tremendous amount of blowback into the action, so the firing pin seizes up every 500 rounds or so. That would save a lot of disassembly and cleaning.
It's 2025 - "Cutesy Time is OVER....!" [Dan Bongino]
- Scott Tschirhart
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Re: Lite primer strike
I’ll bet that would help. Might vent some of the carbon out as well.AJMD429 wrote: ↑Sun Jun 15, 2025 11:06 am
I am considering drilling a hole in my Ruger 96/22's bolt from the right side (visible when action closed) to the firing pin channel, the diameter of a WD-40 straw, because the gun is integrally suppressed, and get a tremendous amount of blowback into the action, so the firing pin seizes up every 500 rounds or so. That would save a lot of disassembly and cleaning.
Re: Lite primer strike
I would suggest first, open the action and push th rear of the firing pin as far forward as possible and see how much the tip protrudes from the bolt face, and if it seems adequate to impact the primer deeply enough.bitterbeer wrote: ↑Fri Jun 13, 2025 9:59 am I have us made modern Winchester 1894 in 38-55. Been shooting fine until now. After about 10 rounds the loaded cartridge didn’t fire, tried another , same thing. I noticed the primer strike was very lite. Would this possibly be a broken firing pin?
Thanks,
Rich
"Far better it is to dare mighty things, to win glorious triumphs even though checkered by failure, than to rank with those poor spirits who neither enjoy nor suffer much because they live in the gray twilight that knows neither victory nor defeat." -Theodore Roosevelt-
Isnt it amazing how many people post without reading the thread?
Isnt it amazing how many people post without reading the thread?