I have a CVA 32 my dad built for me as a kid. I shot it last month for the first time in 20 plus years. Everything went fine, no problems.
Last weekend I shot it and had problems. Every other time I set the set trigger and attempted to pull the trigger it would just release the set trigger. Then I’d set the trigger again and pull the trigger and it would fire.
I brought it home and cleaned it. I took the lock off and cleaned it this time. (I didn’t do this after shooting last month.) The sear was almost impossible to move with my fingers. I gave it a liberal coat of WD-40 and let it sit. That seemed to fox the sear. It now moves easily and I can make the hammer engage by moving the sear with my hands again. I expected that to solve my problem. It did not.
So I assume there’s something going on with the trigger mechanism? Anyone have any advise? The person I’d normally ask is my dad but he passed away in April (and let’s be honest he’d probably just fix it for me).
Anyway, I’m guessing the next step is to remove the trigger mechanism. Oh and in the lock there’s a little screw with a coil type spring on it. Anybody know what that does? I included a picture of the lock.
In case anyone on here knew him, my dad was Ray Melby.
Last weekend I shot it and had problems. Every other time I set the set trigger and attempted to pull the trigger it would just release the set trigger. Then I’d set the trigger again and pull the trigger and it would fire.
I brought it home and cleaned it. I took the lock off and cleaned it this time. (I didn’t do this after shooting last month.) The sear was almost impossible to move with my fingers. I gave it a liberal coat of WD-40 and let it sit. That seemed to fox the sear. It now moves easily and I can make the hammer engage by moving the sear with my hands again. I expected that to solve my problem. It did not.
So I assume there’s something going on with the trigger mechanism? Anyone have any advise? The person I’d normally ask is my dad but he passed away in April (and let’s be honest he’d probably just fix it for me).
Anyway, I’m guessing the next step is to remove the trigger mechanism. Oh and in the lock there’s a little screw with a coil type spring on it. Anybody know what that does? I included a picture of the lock.
In case anyone on here knew him, my dad was Ray Melby.