My CZ Bobwhite is hard to load shell into.....

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GSPBearMan

My CZ Bobwhite is hard to load shell into.....

Post by GSPBearMan » Thu May 08, 2008 9:23 pm

I have a new CZ Bobwhite 20ga. I have maybe 400-500 shell through it now. When I break it open, it seems to have a spring the last 30% that adds tension on opening. It always wants to spring back making loading or un-loading shells hard. I there something I can do to keep the barrels accessable for loading? Shouldn't it just hang open? What am I missing here?

Barry

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Greg Jennings
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Re: My CZ Bobwhite is hard to load shell into.....

Post by Greg Jennings » Fri May 09, 2008 5:27 am

GSPBearMan wrote:I have a new CZ Bobwhite 20ga. I have maybe 400-500 shell through it now. When I break it open, it seems to have a spring the last 30% that adds tension on opening. It always wants to spring back making loading or un-loading shells hard. I there something I can do to keep the barrels accessable for loading? Shouldn't it just hang open? What am I missing here?

Barry
When you open the O/U, you are resetting the hammer springs on the barrels that have been fired. You are possibly resetting ejector springs as well. That depends on whether you have ejectors, if the barrel has been fired and if you have fired the barrel.

Those could be the source of your issue, but it seems like they would reset and then not try to close the action.

Do you have ejectors or extractors?

Greg J.

GSPBearMan

Re: My CZ Bobwhite is hard to load shell into.....

Post by GSPBearMan » Fri May 09, 2008 7:56 am

Greg,

My SxS has a simple slide extractor. No spring associated with that. Don't what it could be......

Barry

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claybuster_aa
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Re: My CZ Bobwhite is hard to load shell into.....

Post by claybuster_aa » Sat May 10, 2008 8:19 am

Barry, I'm not sure what is going on with your gun, but it doesn't sound right. You can try this...take 2 snap caps (or 2 empty hulls) and load them...pull the trigger twice...but DON'T open the gun...just take off the forend first, then remove your barrels by moving your lever over. Now you've taken apart the gun without cocking your triggers first, in other words there should be no tension on those springs. Next time you put your gun together and then open it, now you should be able to note the tension and hear that distinct clicking sound of the hammers being cocked.
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