The Barrel has to be removed to replace it. Any good Gun Smith should be able to do it.
Best left to a gunsmith
Not sure which spring you mean, or what you mean by "case"? If you mean the receiver, then you might be referring to the cartridge cutoff spring, or the lever spring? The lever spring is held by a screw just in front of the lever pivot screw, and keeps pressure on the lever, so it wont droop. The cartridge cutoff spring installs in the top of the receiver, with a screw through the top that holds it just behind the chamber. These are my best guesses, since i don't have good info.
I assume you mean the cartridge guide spring. You will have to remove the barrel to replace the guide spring. The barrel is retained by a cross-pin through the receiver. This is a tapered pin and should be drifted out from the left side of the receiver to the right. If the barrel is tight in the receiver after the cross pin is removed, set the barrel in a padded vise and drift the receiver off to the rear using a nylon, or brass drift punch.
Try e-gunparts.com
Assuming you're referring to the M1903A6, it used the 7.62x63mm cartridge, more popularly known as the .30-06.
There is No C02 cartridge in the Marksman Repeater, it is spring operated
See image here. http://www.thehighroad.org/showthread.php?t=86314&highlight=marlin+60+assembly&page=2 Scroll down to post September 28, 2006, 02:50 AM Ths first image shows the disconnector spring properly in place.
See image here. http://www.thehighroad.org/showthread.php?t=86314&highlight=marlin+60+assembly&page=2 Scroll down to post September 28, 2006, 02:50 AM Ths first image shows the disconnector spring properly in place.
It will vary depending on the rifle, the type of action, and caliber. For a .22 rimfire, the magazine is loaded, the bolt operated manually to chamber the first cartridge. The safety is released and the trigger pulled. This releases that catch on the hammer/striker, which is driven forward by a spring. This drives the firing pin forward, striking the primer. The primer fires, igniting powder, producing gasses that drive the bullet down the barrel. The gasses also "blow back" the heavier bolt, which extracts and ejects the fired cartridge. It compresses the hammer spring, and cocks the hammer. At the end of it travel to the rear, the bolt is pushed back forward by it's spring, stripping a fresh cartridge from the magazine, and pushing it into the chamber, ready to fire. Unlike heavier caliber rifles, the bolt is not locked in the firing position, but held in place by a spring. Heavier caliber rifles are usually gas operated- a part of the gasses from the shot being fired are used to drive a piston to the rear. That causes the bolt to unlock, and move back, ejecting and extracting the fired cartridge, and picking up a fresh cartridge from the magazine as it moves back forward.
How do you install a cluch pedal spring on a 93 honda accord
Yes- the spring pushes on the follower, which pushes the cartridge up. Too much tension, and the cartridge is shoved against the bottom of the bolt.
hammer is spring pushed and hits the firing pin to fire the cartridge.