Maybe you are trying to load the wrong cal. bullet! The Mauser is desigend to only feed from the internal magazine. The extractor claw catches the rim of the cartridge as it rides upward from the magazine. If a bullet is in the chamber, the claw of the extractor will not go over the rim of the cartridge thus not letting the bolt not to close. Trying to force the bolt close in this situation will cause damage to the extractor.
Have it examined by a good gunsmith. This rifle use a .22 caliber bullet, long rifle.
A 180 grain 30/06 bullet can go @ 5700 yards
The barrel of a gun has lans and grooves that cause the bullet to spin. These grooves leave distinct markings on the bullet that are like a fingerprint. No two guns leave the same markings on a bullet. The bullet casings are marked by both the firing pin hitting the primer or case rim, and the extractor that grabs the case and ejects it from the weapon. These are also distinct, gun specific, markings.
When a bullet is fired from a rifled firearm, the rifling leaves marks on the bullet. Those marks are unique to that gun, and no other gun makes exactly the same marks. If a bullet (or fired cartridge casing) is recovered from a crime scene, and we suspect that YOUR gun was used to commit this crime, then a sample bullet is fired from your gun, and compared to the crime scene bullet. A comparison microscope is used to compare the bullets, or marks made on the fired cartridge case by the extractor and firing pin.
Made for Pioneer Stores by J. Stevens, it is likely a .22 LR.
What I need is a 5 bullet 22 clip for a savage steven model 62
if your question is firearms forensics 'toolmark' you may be refering to determining if a bullet was fired from a specific weapon. if so, investigators view a fired bullet from a suspects gun, and a bullet retrieved from a crime scene. the two bullet are then compared under a strong scope to see if their lands and groves MATCH. if so, then a person owning said weapon can be charged. the same 'toolmark' goes with 'marks' left on bullet cases cause by a firing pin, ejector, extractor, lip of a slide (in semi-auto pistols).
Well, you will have to define the term 22 caliber bullet- there are dozens of different versions. If you mean the ordinary .22 Long Rifle cartridge, it was created by the J. Stevens Arms & Tool Company in Chicopee Falls, MA.
After a bullet is fired, the casing, which is the container for the gunpowder and projectile, is ejected from the firearm. This occurs due to the extraction and ejection process facilitated by the firearm's action, often using an extractor and ejector mechanism. The casing typically falls to the ground or can be collected for reloading purposes. It may also be discarded or left at the scene, depending on the circumstances.
The answer to what I think you're asking is, if it's happening consistently, it's probably an extractor problem. If it happens every now and then, it's probably an issue with the ammo or with your grip.
Sometimes, a stove pipe is caused by a weak or improper grip; the slide doesn't cycle fully. Sometimes it's caused by an extractor problem. If it happens infrequently, it's probably grip issue.