NTSOG wrote:G'day,
I've had some misfiring with my elderly Anschutz 1532 rifles [.222 Rem]. I suspect the compression springs have not been replaced since the rifles came out of the factory decades ago. There are no springs available from Anschutz and US suppliers will not ship to Australia. I have spoken to Jubilee Spring Sales in NSW and they will make duplicates for me. The only issue is that I don't have clue what power they produced when new. The folks at Jubilee should be able to measure the power in my existing tired springs which I will send to them for reference. To get any information from Anschutz is nigh impossible. Can anyone suggest what power such springs should be new?
Jim
The old fix would be to give the spring a stretch to make it longer.
Measure the existing spring - overall length, pitch, outside diameter, and wire diameter. Then stand it on a scale with a rule and measure how much weight you have to apply to compress it 1mm, 10mm, 20mm, etc. I would expect it to be a linear rate spring (rather than progressive). It might take 100gm to compress it 1mm, 1000gm for 10mm, 2000gm for 20mm. With suspension springs I apply known weights and measure the compression. With this info you should be able to order some springs of similar dimensions with different rates.
There are lots of spring sellers on Ebay for example.
https://www.ebay.com.au/itm/296009976195When I lost the main spring guide rod in the Norinco JW21 lever-action I just tied a length of bungy cord around the hammer and it worked just fine for 1306rds until I got a new guide rod.