@hippo939 Yes and no. I own an LRS2 & you can move the bolt to a point where it's almost closed, but not fully. At that point, if you pull the trigger, the bolt will lock and the firing pin will be released against the primer, albeit not at full force: the primer will have only a slight dimple/impression from the primer. Not sure if that's a defect or a feature, but if the sequence is different (primer first, then bolt locks) or if your primer is a sensitive one, then there may indeed be a risk!
what if the bolt didnt lock? would you get a face full of bolt?
NYhunter4 1 year ago
@NYhunter4 If the bolt didn't lock it, it will not fire!
hippo939 1 year ago
@hippo939 Yes and no. I own an LRS2 & you can move the bolt to a point where it's almost closed, but not fully. At that point, if you pull the trigger, the bolt will lock and the firing pin will be released against the primer, albeit not at full force: the primer will have only a slight dimple/impression from the primer. Not sure if that's a defect or a feature, but if the sequence is different (primer first, then bolt locks) or if your primer is a sensitive one, then there may indeed be a risk!
LoadManCummith 4 months ago
@LoadManCummith I always fully close my bolt before firing it . But it's still good to know . Thanks!
hippo939 4 months ago
...then I jizzed in my pants....
ViktorTheRussian 1 year ago 2
good stuff!
onereddfoxxx 2 years ago 9