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1886nut
11-28-2020, 11:01 PM
I can't get a round to feed and then chamber in this antique 45-70 Winchester 1886. Magazine, cartridge stop, and lifter work fine. Round makes it about into the chamber as you see it and then jams and the cartridge base refuses to jump up and get in line with the bore axis. No reasonable amount of hand pressure on the lever will budge it. Gun letters as a 45-70 but I can't say if the bbl is original. I didnt look at it closely before sending it off to Turnbull for restoration but since they didnt do the barrel work they didnt flag this problem.

Although I only shoot trapdoor reloads with hard cast lead boolits in old 45-70s (they are more than enough for the deer around here), the round in the photo is a Remington green box with a flat nose but fairly rounded sides and enough of a crimp that should feed about as smooth as any from a levergun. The edge of the chamber mouth looks kind of sharp. Would a simple polishing with emory paper be in order? Its a takedown rifle so no problem with access.

Gun fires and ejects fine when loaded as a single shot.

272272

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Bird
11-28-2020, 11:59 PM
Is the edge of the chamber cutting into the bullet? If not, I doubt that it is causing the problem. It will not hurt to smooth the chamber mouth a little.

cwtebay
11-29-2020, 02:37 AM
Is there any sort of mark on the bullet after you applied lever pressure? Or perhaps marks on the case?

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curdog007
11-29-2020, 12:04 PM
Have you tried operating the action quickly and firmly?
I had a 92 that would do this when it was cycled slowly, but worked fine when operated in a brisk manner.

mack1
11-29-2020, 05:18 PM
It is hard to tell in your photo, but looks to me like the lifter is not rising all the way to the top. It should be flush with the chamber at the mouth.

indian joe
11-29-2020, 09:31 PM
Have you tried operating the action quickly and firmly?
I had a 92 that would do this when it was cycled slowly, but worked fine when operated in a brisk manner.

could be - most winchesters feed better like this than slow ..............one caveat - they call it a finger lever for a reason - that brisk action is meant to be done with the outer ends of the fingers, not grappling it with a fist.

indian joe
11-29-2020, 09:32 PM
It is hard to tell in your photo, but looks to me like the lifter is not rising all the way to the top. It should be flush with the chamber at the mouth.

this too !!!!!

Tar Heel
11-29-2020, 09:44 PM
I have to agree with the above comments regarding "manning up" on the action. I used to baby the action of my 1886 and had jamming issues. An old gray beard at the range saw me one day and suggested I run the gun like my life depended on it. Haven't had a jam since. Mine is a Miroku. I hope your rifle doesn't need a lot of work and this can be fixed with some firm lever work.

https://youtu.be/wYFn2suq6Oc

gmsharps
11-30-2020, 08:45 AM
I have a uberti 45-60 that had feeding issues. It would fire most anything and eject if loaded manually but would not feed. Finally I found a nose design that the gun liked and has worked flawlessly since. Just a thought.

gmsharps

John Taylor
11-30-2020, 01:34 PM
This is a real problem when converting to 50 EX and sometimes with the 45-90. Chambers need to be polished to aid in feeding. Have not seen many problems with other calibers. Had one 40-65 that had feeding issues and it turned out the bolt had so much ware that it was causing the carrier to go down as the bolt was closing.

David LaPell
12-04-2020, 05:36 PM
I can't get a round to feed and then chamber in this antique 45-70 Winchester 1886. Magazine, cartridge stop, and lifter work fine. Round makes it about into the chamber as you see it and then jams and the cartridge base refuses to jump up and get in line with the bore axis. No reasonable amount of hand pressure on the lever will budge it. Gun letters as a 45-70 but I can't say if the bbl is original. I didnt look at it closely before sending it off to Turnbull for restoration but since they didnt do the barrel work they didnt flag this problem.

Although I only shoot trapdoor reloads with hard cast lead boolits in old 45-70s (they are more than enough for the deer around here), the round in the photo is a Remington green box with a flat nose but fairly rounded sides and enough of a crimp that should feed about as smooth as any from a levergun. The edge of the chamber mouth looks kind of sharp. Would a simple polishing with emory paper be in order? Its a takedown rifle so no problem with access.

Gun fires and ejects fine when loaded as a single shot.

272272

272274

272275

Take it somewhere safe where you can safely cycle live rounds or use dummy rounds. As you work the lever, take your left hand and just lightly push in on the loading cover as you try and cycle the round in. If the gun cycles, then your loading gate has lost its "spring". I have an 1894 that's doing the same thing yours is doing and that loading gate cover could also be keeping your lifter from coming up all the way.

Greg G
12-05-2020, 01:57 AM
Is the rim of the case hanging up on the ejector? My 1886 had that problem before.

1886nut
12-05-2020, 11:18 PM
Yep.....lever simply needed to be worked smartly.. So long as you do that it feeds smoothly. An 1886 in 45-70 and 50-110 is not a little 1894 in 30-30.lol


https://i.imgur.com/Ol03T57.jpg

https://i.imgur.com/1VfdIjC.jpg

Kev18
12-14-2020, 10:16 AM
My 40-82 does this also. The lifter doesn't lift up the cartridge. It kicks up the end and the bolt rams it in.
If you have the perfect cartridge dimensions for your rifle, it is possible to do it slowly but that just takes time and testing.
https://i.imgur.com/4WpAuSK.jpg

flint45
12-16-2020, 03:30 PM
Yes I have an original 1886 and you have to work that action very quickly depending on the bullet that I’m using if you go really slow it hangs up I have to do the same with my marlin 94 and 44 magnum fast is better.

Triggerfinger
12-16-2020, 06:45 PM
I have a uberti 45-60 that had feeding issues. It would fire most anything and eject if loaded manually but would not feed. Finally I found a nose design that the gun liked and has worked flawlessly since. Just a thought.

gmsharps

Same here and found the RCBS 300-FN worked best in my 45-60.