BTC3
Well-known member
Had a great day out shooting today. It seemed that I could hit almost anything, gun was comfortable in the shoulder, lead (as in the metal) was flying in the right direction, in other words, where I was trying to put it, I was in good company, the sun was shining... You get the idea.
A few shots in I realised that the top barrel wasn't ejecting. Not ejecting more weakly, just not at all. At first I thought the way I was holding my hand over the cartridges on opening the gun was somehow preventing it from ejecting. It was firing OK, so carried on, and it was clear that it just wasn't ejecting. Took the gun to pieces, everything passed a quick visual inspection, the ejectors had good spring resistance, and there was no fouling. Put it back together again, fired a couple of cartridges, no ejection on the top barrel. Long story short, the experts at the ground couldn't figure it out, so it went back to the RFD, who at first couldn't work out what it was either, but after half an hour of looking at it from all angles, suspects that the culprit is a broken ejector cocking rod. They've taken it in for repair, and I can foresee that I will be without my [number 1] gun for a fortnight or longer. Back in January the gun was out of commission for the best part of 6 weeks while they replaced the fore-end mechanism as the fore-end was rattling and there was nothing left to fettle to stop it. Top lever was also replaced as the spring seemed to be a bit worn too.
So now I'm hacked off. I really like the gun, I shoot, admittedly by own standards, well with it, it's comfortable, it fits, and I have yet to find another gun with a grip that is as comfortable. But I got it last August, and I don't think that spending the best part of 2, soon probably 3, months being fixed is on. The RFD has been good about fixing all of this (the gun was bought used and out of manufacturer warranty) but I have to wonder, is it time to call it a day and get something else? I guess there are no hard and fast rules about this sort of thing, but what would you do?
Thanks,
Richard
A few shots in I realised that the top barrel wasn't ejecting. Not ejecting more weakly, just not at all. At first I thought the way I was holding my hand over the cartridges on opening the gun was somehow preventing it from ejecting. It was firing OK, so carried on, and it was clear that it just wasn't ejecting. Took the gun to pieces, everything passed a quick visual inspection, the ejectors had good spring resistance, and there was no fouling. Put it back together again, fired a couple of cartridges, no ejection on the top barrel. Long story short, the experts at the ground couldn't figure it out, so it went back to the RFD, who at first couldn't work out what it was either, but after half an hour of looking at it from all angles, suspects that the culprit is a broken ejector cocking rod. They've taken it in for repair, and I can foresee that I will be without my [number 1] gun for a fortnight or longer. Back in January the gun was out of commission for the best part of 6 weeks while they replaced the fore-end mechanism as the fore-end was rattling and there was nothing left to fettle to stop it. Top lever was also replaced as the spring seemed to be a bit worn too.
So now I'm hacked off. I really like the gun, I shoot, admittedly by own standards, well with it, it's comfortable, it fits, and I have yet to find another gun with a grip that is as comfortable. But I got it last August, and I don't think that spending the best part of 2, soon probably 3, months being fixed is on. The RFD has been good about fixing all of this (the gun was bought used and out of manufacturer warranty) but I have to wonder, is it time to call it a day and get something else? I guess there are no hard and fast rules about this sort of thing, but what would you do?
Thanks,
Richard