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#ITHACA MODEL 49 ASSEMBLY INSTRUCTIONS PROFESSIONAL#
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#ITHACA MODEL 49 ASSEMBLY INSTRUCTIONS MANUAL#
22 rifles with the adjustable buttplate, the disassembly book referenced above and the owner's manual available online describe an incorrect procedure for removing the buttplate.One of the largest publishers in the United States, the Johns Hopkins University Press combines traditional books and journals publishing units with cutting-edge service divisions that sustain diversity and independence among nonprofit, scholarly publishers, societies, and associations. One footnote: If you should ever get one of the old Daisy. Actually, the gun still fired with the broken firing pin, but I replaced it anyway. Removing and replacing the broken firing pin was easy compared to a complete teardown. Found one on ebay that was cheaper than Numrich. I used a chamber reamer to cure the extraction problem, reassembled, and now it works great.īTW, when I took it apart, I discovered that the firing pin was broken. Using the book you mentioned (love that book :t), I tore the gun completely down, even removing the barrel from the receiver. I tried just cleaning it, especially the chamber, but the extraction/ejection problems persisted. I also just recently got a nice walnut-stocked 49 (my first one.) The GS proprietor said that it was a little hard on extraction.
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To reassemble, be sure that you replace the plunger that is flat on both ends first, then the spring, then the other plunger with the rounded end down. Lift the bolt out carefully so as not to lose the firing pin spring and the small pin that retains the firing pin. With these out, the large pin that holds the bolt can be pushed out toward either side. These must be removed and may take some tapping with a rubber hammer to get them out. Second, there are two plungers and a spring in the teardrop-shaped protrusion on the bottom of the bolt. The book you reference has good directions on this gun, although I can simplify somewhat the steps you need to replace the firing pin.įirst, drive out from left to right the pin that holds the lever and remove the lever downward. Replacing the firing pin is a piece of cake.