This can easily happen if one is firing from an awkward or prone postition which restricts arm movement. Many rifles,including the Model 1895 Winchester, have a long and awkward throw of the lever.
I don't mean any disrespect but have you ever done this? Do you know people who do this on a regular basis? If not it just conjecture, isn't it?
It is possible for me to drive my family sedan in competition with the "stock" cars out there, during the Indy 500 race, but it doesn't really happen. I've fired a few lever action rifles and a few bolt action rifles and have never done this. Millions of soldiers, on all sides, in the last century have used bolt action rifles and this doesn't seem to be a common problem. If it was, I'm sure we would have heard quite a bit about it. Millions of hunters have used some kind of repeating rifle, many against dangerous game and the score still has been overwhelmingly in the favor of the rifle armed hunter. Similarly thousands of settlers and hunters on the American continent have used lever action rifles and this really isn't a common complaint about this type of action.
When bench shooting every shooter is concius for his brass(case) so he can reload and shoot again.If a bench shooter is in hunt game then his habbits of soft ejecting or ejecting at lower speed can be cause of loose his hunt.
Ashokgadora, I do not mean to belittle the experiences of Two Rivers, whose experience with guns is vast compared to mine. I'm willing to bet that with all his experience, he hasn't done that many times either. I think he was explaining the term "short stroking" and that it is possible but is not an every day occurrence. Do you know a lot of people who regularly short stroke their actions while hunting because they spend a lot of time on the bench?
Winnie, when actually hunting, I tend to concentrate on the game and don't think about the mechanics of loading another cartridge into the chamber. It is perfectly natural then to run the bolt, the lever or the pump back and forth to its mechanical stops when actuating the action.
“Never give in, never give in, never; never; never; never – in nothing, great or small, large or petty – never give in except to convictions of honor and good sense” — Winston Churchill, Oct 29, 1941