Rigby mauser

john corry

AH member
Joined
Feb 3, 2017
Messages
25
Reaction score
14
Hi All,
I’m trying to figure out a problem that 3 of my pre war Rigby’s have. When I load the rifle, with 3 - 5 rounds in the magazine, the rounds move around and one can hear them jangling away when moving the rifle. This happens in two 350s and one 350 No. 2. I have tried both modern ammo and even a box of the original stuff from 1920. Any ideas? Thanks.
 
Weak magazine springs? I cannot think of anything else that should have that effect. I can’t say as I’ve seen that on any rifle
 
Are you in the US? Might call Lon Paul, I know he has worked on /built several 350s including standard and stepped ring/slant box versions. As a random guess it sounds like the box dims or follower are slightly off and the round are tight at the base but are not being held together throughout their length. That’s just a guess.
 
If it's causing problems, I would have Rigby look at the guns, service or replace ethe springs, and run a reliability check. Springs can look fine, but they lose their spring, you can't see it, they may look like new, but they are not. Same for firing pin springs, should be replaced over time.
 
Sounds like the box is oversize for the cartridge ... as in way oversize. You should be able to look in the magazine when it's loaded and see very little space between bullet tip and forward end of the box. Actually, I would have thought the gun would not cycle smoothly if the mag box was too long. Is the box length longer at the bottom (depth) than the top? However, that would seem unlikely if the bottom metal is machined. The opposite would usually be the case to allow for "drift" when machining. If you can see a lot of space ahead of the bullets loaded in the box, a gunsmith could add a spacer. Bullet seating is obviously not the issue because you have the same problem with period factory loads.

This is a strange one. Hope you get it figured out. You should look after fixing this as cartridges rattling in the box could mean bullets getting shoved back in their cases during recoil = messed up velocity = trajectory changes.
 
Sounds like the box is oversize for the cartridge ... as in way oversize. You should be able to look in the magazine when it's loaded and see very little space between bullet tip and forward end of the box. Actually, I would have thought the gun would not cycle smoothly if the mag box was too long. Is the box length longer at the bottom (depth) than the top? However, that would seem unlikely if the bottom metal is machined. The opposite would usually be the case to allow for "drift" when machining. If you can see a lot of space ahead of the bullets loaded in the box, a gunsmith could add a spacer. Bullet seating is obviously not the issue because you have the same problem with period factory loads.

This is a strange one. Hope you get it figured out. You should look after fixing this as cartridges rattling in the box could mean bullets getting shoved back in their cases during recoil = messed up velocity = trajectory changes.
So, after a phone call with Paul Roberts he explained to me it’s actually a common issue - the Rigby 350s were built on Magnum actions which were really designed for the 416. A very desirable action but quite annoying to hear that it’s a known prob. I have no feed probs just the noise. Will be rectified by fitting a small spacer.
 
So, after a phone call with Paul Roberts he explained to me it’s actually a common issue - the Rigby 350s were built on Magnum actions which were really designed for the 416. A very desirable action but quite annoying to hear that it’s a known prob. I have no feed probs just the noise. Will be rectified by fitting a small spacer.
Good news that it will be an easy fix. I have to wonder what Rigby was thinking. Why build that caliber on an oversize, heavier, longer bolt stroke, more expensive action? Perhaps they ordered more magnum actions than they could fill orders for? If your guns were made during the Depression, that may very well have been the reason. Makes for an interesting story to your rifles.

I wonder if the spacer will go at the front or rear of the box?
 
The springs seem fine. The rifles are all in very good condition, with little use.

On custom English mausers built 50 years later than yours, I found the magazine springs would fail within a year. There is a firm that makes a magnum mauser spring for about $20 that is 15% stronger. Those would last 2 years for me.

The thing that kills even the magnum strength mauser spring is overstuffing the magazine for a +1. That overcompresses the spring.

In short, I think you dismissed other's suggestions too quickly. The other alternative is that Rigby is a terrible company that made unreliable guns, therefore the geometry of the follower is all wrong and a new, correct custom follower needs to be fabricated. <- Do you see why its more likely the spring?
 
In addition to the spring, you can make a box from sheet stock to tighten the tolerances if there's enough room without inletting the stock. If there isn't enough room for metal, 3D printing something using a very strong polymer might solve it without interference.
 
On custom English mausers built 50 years later than yours, I found the magazine springs would fail within a year. There is a firm that makes a magnum mauser spring for about $20 that is 15% stronger. Those would last 2 years for me.

The thing that kills even the magnum strength mauser spring is overstuffing the magazine for a +1. That overcompresses the spring.

In short, I think you dismissed other's suggestions too quickly. The other alternative is that Rigby is a terrible company that made unreliable guns, therefore the geometry of the follower is all wrong and a new, correct custom follower needs to be fabricated. <- Do you see why its more likely the spring?
Very good points. Much appreciated.
 
On custom English mausers built 50 years later than yours, I found the magazine springs would fail within a year. There is a firm that makes a magnum mauser spring for about $20 that is 15% stronger. Those would last 2 years for me.

The thing that kills even the magnum strength mauser spring is overstuffing the magazine for a +1. That overcompresses the spring.

In short, I think you dismissed other's suggestions too quickly. The other alternative is that Rigby is a terrible company that made unreliable guns, therefore the geometry of the follower is all wrong and a new, correct custom follower needs to be fabricated. <- Do you see why its more likely the spring?
The magnum springs are apparently wider. My military spring was too narrow for the magnum follower I ordered from NECG so I pinched the follower a bit in a vice to close up the retainers. Works fine. NECG no longer sells magnum Mauser follower springs. Neither does anyone else. Hoosier lists them on their website but zero in stock.

Anyway, OP has consulted a reputable gunsmith who confirmed my suspicion that the box is too long. A standard length cartridge loaded into a magnum action.

Adding a spacer inside the box would be much easier than fabricating another box. Mauser magazine is typically machined as one unit with bottom metal ( = trigger guard + magazine box + floorplate).
 
On custom English mausers built 50 years later than yours, I found the magazine springs would fail within a year. There is a firm that makes a magnum mauser spring for about $20 that is 15% stronger. Those would last 2 years for me.

The thing that kills even the magnum strength mauser spring is overstuffing the magazine for a +1. That overcompresses the spring.

In short, I think you dismissed other's suggestions too quickly. The other alternative is that Rigby is a terrible company that made unreliable guns, therefore the geometry of the follower is all wrong and a new, correct custom follower needs to be fabricated. <- Do you see why it’s more likely the spring?
Would you mind sharing which firm produces these springs? Thanks.
 
Would you mind sharing which firm produces these springs? Thanks.

A cursory look of my gmail and the web and I couldn't come up with the name. Brownell's sells a +10% power spring but they don't state a maker. If memory serves, you could get a 15% or 20% power model for standard and magnum lengths from the real maker that was somewhere in the USA.

Sorry to put you on the snipe hunt, but I promise you they exist and I last bought them 4-5 years ago. (100% of Cogswell & Harrison rifles i've handled needed them due to years of +1 compression of the factory strength follower spring)
 
Would you mind sharing which firm produces these springs? Thanks.
You can restore collapsed springs by stretching them apart. However, that can be too much of a good thing. If the follower spring has too much tension, it can cause cartridges to jump the rails prematurely. For a push feed or quality CRF with snap over capability that may not be disastrous ... unless more than one cartridge jumps the rails when bolt is opened ... while you are smelling a buffalo's bad breath.

Fix the box, then worry about the spring. I seriously doubt that is the issue. Even a weak spring should not produce the clattering you are describing. Symptom of a weak follower spring is typically unreliable feeding due to bolt face skipping over the cartridge rim and/or cartridge shoulder jumping the rail too late ( = rough cycling). You said your gun cycles fine.
 
Last edited:
Last I looked they had zero in their inventory. That was two years ago. I phoned and was told the magnum Mauser springs were discontinued. Maybe they have them in stock now. Hoosier guys are not very techy and their website inventory is often (usually) in need of update. Always best to phone them. I seem to recall they only take orders over the phone anyway. Very nice folks to deal with.
 

Forum statistics

Threads
59,061
Messages
1,277,143
Members
106,697
Latest member
FSGPansy73
 

 

 

Latest profile posts

James Friedrichs wrote on Dangerous Dave's profile.
can you send some pics of the 2.5-10 zeiss. I can't click on the pics to see the details. You noted some scratches. thx.
This is the African safari deal you’ve been waiting for!

Trophy Kudu Bull + Trophy Gemsbuck - ONLY $1,800 for BOTH!

Available for the 2025 & 2026 seasons
Elite Hunting Outfitters – Authentic, world-class safaris
Limited spots available – Act now!



Make your African hunting dream a reality! Contact us today before this deal is gone!
Updated Available dates for this season,

9-25 June
25-31 July
September and October is wide open,

Remember I will be in the USA for the next 16 days , will post my USA phone number when I can get one in Atlanta this afternoon!
I am on my way to the USA! will be in Atlanta tonight! loving the Wifi On the Delta flights!
Get it right the 1st time - choose the Leopard specialists!
 
Top