Your reasoning is entirely factual and logical,
roklok, I subscribe to it, and I mainly agree with it: in a turn bolt rifle with a firing pin of the correct length, the bolt has to be nearly 100% closed for the firing pin to reach the primer.
And I agree that improperly assembled firing pin assemblies (
my case with the CZ 550, I did not count the turns when disassembling - I was young and naive in those days!), or those home-tuned to have a "stronger and deeper striking force" (
I have heard that many times amongst mountain hunters dealing with frozen snow and ice) are a wild card.
So, in the case of an oversized reload with the bolt nearly completely closed, what would be technically a firing out of battery, i.e. bolt not 100% fully closed, could in fact be in battery "if not 100% near enough to 100% for all practical purposes" as you say ... and would therefore go undetected as I say, or be non existent for practical purposes, as you assert.
Shifting now away for oversized reloads, I have actually seen a Win 70 fire at some stage between "out of battery" and "in battery"!
In the mid 80's, in a Pennsylvania deer camp, I actually witnessed a hunter intent on carrying his Win 70 rifle with the firing pin spring untensioned over a round in the chamber, lower his bolt handle too fast (or probably let it slip?) while he was depressing the trigger, and the outcome was opposite the general rule you mentioned in your previous post: "Generally the energy needed to finish closing the bolt saps so much energy there is not enough remaining to ignite primer." I agree with the general rule, but in this case, the firing pin spring energy DID finish closing the bolt AND DID ignite the primer. Whether the primer ignited, and the rifle fired, before the bolt was 100% closed, or not, I do not know, but fire it did. Thank God for muzzle discipline, there was no consequence, aside from embarrassment...
So, as an outcome of our discussion, I will remove the words "on an incompletely re-sized reload" from my previous example, because such oversized reload will prevent the bolt from closing under the firing pin energy, and I will further remove the word "likely?", and I will simply say, because, THAT, I have seen with my own two eyes:
Here is a Winchester 70 action partially closed on an incompletely re-sized reload. If you pull the trigger now, it will possibly (likely ?) go bang.
Again, no blame on the Win 70, the blame rests with the hunter,
but the main point I was trying to make, stands: a partially closed turn bolt can fire when the trigger is depressed, although I grant you that it is indeed extremely improbable with an oversized reload that prevents the bolt from closing nearly 100%.
You can easily replicate the failure mode by letting your bolt handle fly down on an empty primed case inserted manually in the chamber. It will be fascinating to hear if the primer ignites or not, although individual springs tension likely vary significantly.
Good discussion, thank you, I hope it was not too boring for the audience
