Rifle ice/snow freeze eval 2025

I just checked all my crf actions. With the M77s the rim doesn't slide underneath the extractor until about halfway through pushing the bolt closed, and it's nowhere near completely underneath the extractor -just enough so that if I started pulling the bolt back it would pull the cartridge with it. The cartridge is not fully seated underneath that extractor until about the last 15% of closing the bolt. Is this what you're talking about?

Properly timed, the rim slips under the extractor the instant it releases from the feed lips.


Whatever the situation might be, I'm guessing @longrangelead could fix/improve it?


He ain’t no goo…. He could probably fix it, yes.

Grin
 
Shitty weather and a postponed hunting trip had me going stir crazy yesterday, so I did a slightly modified version of this with a Tikka and MRC. I've had R700 actions and triggers give me issues on late season hunts before, the Tikkas have been flawless through shitty weather so far. The MRC is 4 days old and has just been shot, no cleaning or stripping of any factory oils/grease.

I left the rifles outside for ~20 mins, then poured 8 oz water onto the actions & bolts. We don't have enough snow on the ground to throw the rifles into, so a few shovels worth was piled on the actions and left overnight. Rifles had empty chambers, full AICS magazines, safety on. Starting temp was -2*, overnight low was -11.7*, temp this morning was 2*.

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First up was the Tikka, it was locked up solid. A swift hit to the mag with my palm and it would release. Follower was frozen to the bottom of the mag, a second hit dislodged it and it functioned fine. Safety would release, trigger was frozen solid. Bolt would unlock but didn't want to cycle to the rear. Pressure from the heel of my boot did the trick. Rifle functioned fine after cycling the bolt.

MRC was locked up solid as well. Mag took a little more to release (mag release tab is smaller), but the bolt cycled way easier than the Tikka. Safety worked fine. Trigger seemed to function fine, but the firing pin would not drop even after repeated cycling of the bolt. It took ~3 minutes warming up inside to release the firing pin, first strike was weak but was 100% after that. Rifle fed fine from the magazine throughout the process.

Lesson learned here is don't go swimming below zero then get buried in an avalanche then try to hunt the next day without a few minutes to tinker with things. I'll field strip the bolt on the MRC today and see what (if anything) is inside as far as grease goes, then will take it back out (high of 15* & snowing today) and shoot some coyotes.
 
Shitty weather and a postponed hunting trip had me going stir crazy yesterday, so I did a slightly modified version of this with a Tikka and MRC. I've had R700 actions and triggers give me issues on late season hunts before, the Tikkas have been flawless through shitty weather so far. The MRC is 4 days old and has just been shot, no cleaning or stripping of any factory oils/grease.

I left the rifles outside for ~20 mins, then poured 8 oz water onto the actions & bolts. We don't have enough snow on the ground to throw the rifles into, so a few shovels worth was piled on the actions and left overnight. Rifles had empty chambers, full AICS magazines, safety on. Starting temp was -2*, overnight low was -11.7*, temp this morning was 2*.

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First up was the Tikka, it was locked up solid. A swift hit to the mag with my palm and it would release. Follower was frozen to the bottom of the mag, a second hit dislodged it and it functioned fine. Safety would release, trigger was frozen solid. Bolt would unlock but didn't want to cycle to the rear. Pressure from the heel of my boot did the trick. Rifle functioned fine after cycling the bolt.

MRC was locked up solid as well. Mag took a little more to release (mag release tab is smaller), but the bolt cycled way easier than the Tikka. Safety worked fine. Trigger seemed to function fine, but the firing pin would not drop even after repeated cycling of the bolt. It took ~3 minutes warming up inside to release the firing pin, first strike was weak but was 100% after that. Rifle fed fine from the magazine throughout the process.

Lesson learned here is don't go swimming below zero then get buried in an avalanche then try to hunt the next day without a few minutes to tinker with things. I'll field strip the bolt on the MRC today and see what (if anything) is inside as far as grease goes, then will take it back out (high of 15* & snowing today) and shoot some coyotes.
Yeah, I think 8 oz a water in those temps is a bit much to expect from any rifle. If I end up swimming in those temps, I’m certainly done for the day too. I think the winter tests are best off trying to replicate snow accumulation or having a warm rifle condense in cold temps with some accumulation of snow on them.
 
Yeah, I think 8 oz a water in those temps is a bit much to expect from any rifle. If I end up swimming in those temps, I’m certainly done for the day too. I think the winter tests are best off trying to replicate snow accumulation or having a warm rifle condense in cold temps with some accumulation of snow on them.

Agreed, it was more of a "I wonder what will happen?" kind of thing. The picture below is pretty common throughout the winter, and hasn't given me issues.

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I can see the use case to determine IF the action set up will freeze. Especially based on the pics. Would a cover such as this
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Elevate the issue? The likely hood of a frozen actions and trigger should be lessened if you can manage to keep most moisture and condensation out with a cover. I suspect it is far less time to thaw and less likely to be locked up in the first place.
 
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