IMMEDIATE ACTION AND STOPPAGES
| Paragraph | |
| Object |
39
|
| When taken up |
40
|
| Immediate action |
41
|
| Stoppages |
42
|
39. OBJECT. -- This section is designed to provide necessary instruction in the related subjects of immediate action and stoppages.
40. WHEN TAKEN UP. -- Instruction in immediate action and stoppages will be completed before any firing is done by the individual.
41. IMMEDIATE ACTION. --
a. General. -- Immediate action is the unhesitating application
of a probable remedy for a stoppage. Immediate action deals
with the method of reducing stoppages and not the cause. It is taught
as an unhesitating manual operation to be applied to reduce stoppages without
detailed consideration of their causes.
b. Procedure. -- (1) If
the loaded carbine fails to fire when the trigger is pulled, count to "20"
to allow for a hangfire, and then pull the operating slide handle to its
rearmost position ejecting the round. Release the operating slide
handle and if the bolt goes fully home, aim and fire.
CAUTION: When pulled to the rear,
operating slide handle will be grasped by the little finger, with the palm
of hand facing up, to guard against binjury should the cartridge fire late
and actuate the operating mechanism while operating slide is being retracted.
(2) If the bolt cannot be fully locked
in (1) above, pull the operating slide handle to the rear.
Check for a battered round, dirt, or obstruction on the face of the bolt,
in the chamber, or in the locking lug recesses. Discard the battered
round; remove the obstruction. Reload, aim, and fire.
(3) The carbine fires but fails to feed.
-- Keep the Carbing in action by wworkking the operating slide handle
as it is still an effective combat weapon. A detailed examination
for the malfunction may be made later when time permits.
(4) Trigger fails to move forward
when released due to broken or disengaged trigger spring. -- Push
trigger forward manuallyafter each shot, until time permits examination
and correction. (Refer to paragraph
38 b (2) ).
42. STOPPAGES. -- a.
General. -- While immediate action and stoppages are closely related
as to subject matter, the former is treated seperately to imphasize its
importance as an automatic and definite procedure to be applied to overcome
stoppages. Proper care of the carbine, before, during, and after
firing will usually eliminate stoppages. Stoppages which cannot be
remedied by the application of immediate action can best be eliminated
if the soldier has an understanding of the functioning of the weapon and
the causes of stoppages.
b. Failure to fire. -- (1)
Causes. -- Failures to fire are generally caused by:
(a) Defective Ammunition.
(b) Defective firing pin.
(c) Bolt not fully closed when hammer
strikes firing pin.
(2) Action. -- (a) If the
primer of a round is deeply indented, the round is defective. Discard
the round. If the primer is not indented or but very lightly indented,
the firing pin may be short or broken or the bolt may not have been fully
closed. Check for dirt or dome obstruction which does not permit
the bolt to lock fully. Remove the obstruction. If the carbine
is clean and lubricated, check the firing pin. Replace it if defective.
(b) Removal of a broken firing pin.
-- If the carbine fails to fire annd tthe operating slide handle cannot
be moved to the rear by a sharp blow with the heal of the hand, the firing
pin may be broken, and having come out of its seat in the bolt it may have
become wedged between the rear of the bolt and the top of the reciever.
Remove the barrel and reciever assembly from the stock with trigger housing
attached. Remove trigger housing, and firing pin should fall out.
If barrel and reciever group or trigger housing cannot be removed easily,
do not force. Turn upside down, shake, and work parts carefully until
they will come apart.
c. Failure to feed. -- (1)
Types. -- Failure to feed is caused by failure of the bolt to go
far enough to the rear to pick up a new round. A failure to feed
may have any one of a number of causes. It will generally result
in one of the following types of stoppages:
(a) Those in which the bolt fails to
go fully home.
(b) Those in which the bolt does go
fully home.
(2) Action to reduce stoppages of the
first time. -- Stoppages of the first type may be caused by a battered
round, dirt in the locking recesses, an obstruction on the face of the
bolt, a dirty chamber, or a ruptured cartridge case, part of which remains
in the chamber. Removl of the battered round, dirt, or other obstructions;
clean the chamber, or remove the ruptured cartridge case. Occasionally
this stoppage may be caused by a magazine which has lost its spring tension,
or in which the follower is defective, and does not hold the cartridge
firmly in line. When this occurs, the cartridge will be found in
the carbine with the nose of the bullet one side or the other of the entrance
to the chamber. Remove the round; remove the magazine and discard
it.
(3) Action to reduce stoppage of the
second type. -- Occasionally, when a stoppage of the second type
occurs, the spent case is not ejected but is re-fed back into the chamber.
This condition is caused by lack of lubrication, excessive friction
of the moving parts, or lack of sufficient gas pressure due to the formation
of carbon in the gas port. In any case the bolt has not moved far
enough to the rear to permit proper functioning. The conditions are
remedied by removing all carbon and thoroughly lubricating all parts
as prescribed in Section IV
-- "Care, Cleaniing and
Lubrication."
d. Failure to extract. -- (1)
Causes. -- Failures to extract are generally caused by:
(a) Extremely dirty chamber.
(b) Extremely dirty ammunition.
(c) Improper assembly of the rifle,
such as failure to replace the extractor plunger and spring.
(d) Cartridge case chambered in a hot
barrel.
(e) Broken extractor.
(2) Action. -- (a) When
a failure to extract occurs, the bolt may be found fully locked with a
spent case in the chamber. Generally, most failures to exract can
be remedied by pushing the operating slide fully forward and then pulling
it smartly to the rear. If this does not remove the case, use a combination
tool screw driver, or cleaning rod.
(b) Sometimes the empty case will be
left in the chamber, the extractor ripping through the base of the cartridge.
When this occurs the bolt generally will attempt to feed a fresh cartridge
into the chamber. It will then be necessary to remove this round
before the spent case can be removed.
(c) Where a dirty chamber or dirty ammunition
is indicated, clean the chamber and discard or clean very dirty ammunition.
Faulty assembly or a broken extractor will cause recurring failures to
extract. Replace missing or broken parts.
e. Other stoppages. -- In the
event of stoppages that are not mentioned above and cannot be reduced,
the carbine should be turned in for examination and repair.
f. If the trigger, when retracted, does
not release the hammer, release trigger and retract it again. If
trigger does not release, the trigger spring is probably broken or out
of place. Carbine may still be fired by pushing trigger forward and
then retracting in usual manner as directed in paragraph
41 b (4).
g. If hammer does not release when trigger
is retracted, sear or hammer spring may be broken. Remove trigger
housing group, examine and replace damaged parts.