Hey, Brightside, you're not alone. I got my .30-06 Subalpine this week and had similar issues.
The bolt head can catch on the receiver if the bolt is angled just so, but I'm not too worried about it. I rounded off the corner on the receiver a tiny bit with a jeweler's file and polished it up with 600-grit paper and that helped a lot.
The feeding was horrible, especially on the first round. I had to force it pretty hard and the feed rails left deep scratches on the brass. All's well now, though. A piece of 600-grit paper wrapped around a carpenter pencil, a little bit of spit as cutting fluid, five minutes working on the rails, and now it feeds just fine. I'll polish the feed ramp later.
My mag box was binding, too, so I filed .010" off the front bosses. Now I can wiggle it just the tiniest bit. Perfect.
I love Kimber rifles but I can't figure out how some of these make it past QC and out of the factory.
Now it need a trip to the range to see how it shoots! I'll probably skim bed it but it looks pretty good as-is.
The bolt head can catch on the receiver if the bolt is angled just so, but I'm not too worried about it. I rounded off the corner on the receiver a tiny bit with a jeweler's file and polished it up with 600-grit paper and that helped a lot.
The feeding was horrible, especially on the first round. I had to force it pretty hard and the feed rails left deep scratches on the brass. All's well now, though. A piece of 600-grit paper wrapped around a carpenter pencil, a little bit of spit as cutting fluid, five minutes working on the rails, and now it feeds just fine. I'll polish the feed ramp later.
My mag box was binding, too, so I filed .010" off the front bosses. Now I can wiggle it just the tiniest bit. Perfect.
I love Kimber rifles but I can't figure out how some of these make it past QC and out of the factory.
Now it need a trip to the range to see how it shoots! I'll probably skim bed it but it looks pretty good as-is.