Most Mosin Nagants have what I call loose trigger syndrome. You can take it to a gun smith and he could probably bend the sear for you and take out the slack. I have recently developed a spring to fix this problem. There are a few vendors selling my spring on the net or you can go to my site and check them out. crsurplusspring.com I have video of before and after installation. Like I said a gunsmith can probably do this for you if he knows what he is doing. My fix only cost $7.00. I am selling them like crazy now.
Once you loose you consciousness, the involuntary muscles will act and it will trigger the nerves to do the normal thing such as "breathing"
A little.
Many people mistake a loose cylinder for the normal cylinder play while the gun is in the unfired position with the hammer at rest, the trigger forward. With the gun in the fired position, the hammer having hit the firing pin and the trigger pulled back, the cylinder should be somewhat tighter and not have as much play. This is normal, to have more play in the unfired position and should not be corrected. For a true "loose cylinder" with too much play or movement, you would have to replace the cylinder and yoke assembly and then fit the revolver with a new hand to time the action properly. This requires skill and is not an amateur undertaking.
yes.....................................................
No, it is not normal.
They dont loose their goalie they pull them and they come to the bench and a normal skater goes on for the team. They dont loose their goalie they pull them and they come to the bench and a normal skater goes on for the team.
Yes, they are normal and are caused by the pregnancy hormones
The exact same way a normal rifle does, except that the trigger is typically attached to the firing mechanism by some sort of linkage - this is also the reason bullpup rifles tend to be cited as having really jerky trigger pulls, although this has been rectified in some rifles through the use of a free floating linkage. The primary difference (and, indeed the very definition of what "Bullpup" means) is that a Bullpup's action (bolt/firing pin, breach, et al) is located behind (i.e. closer to the rear) the trigger. Normal rifles also require a linkage between the action and trigger, but this linkage can be extremely short, and thus, less susceptible to becoming loose or stuck, which can be the cause of the "jerkiness" of many Bullpup weapon's trigger pulls.
It is normal for them to be loose as they put a bigger bar in them incase they get swollen, when it is healed then you can buy a smaller one but make sure you do not touch it
NO! it's not good on the spring. Also NEVER dry fire an air rifle. It will ruin the chamber. When a pellet is fired the compressed air actually slows down the piston at the end of the cycle. If no pellet is in the chamber the piston slams against the tube and will eventually ruin it. If the spring is compressed too long it will loose all it strength over time so never leave it cocked.
Anything possible