Most every mil-spec bolt action I have met, the Mauser, Springfield, M17/P14, SMLE, Carcano, Arisaka, all of them, were designed so that the bolt hangs a bit 'loose' when drawn fully to the rear. This is a battlefield design and should not be of concern as they all lock up nice and tight when the bolt is all the way forward.
Every mil-spec bolt action rifle I have ever handled and/or been trained with is specifically designed to be 'slapped open'. That is, using the palm of your open hand: (1) slap the bolt up to unlock it (after firing or to clear the chamber), (2) slap the bolt to the rear to extract and eject a spent casing of loaded round, (3) slap or slam the bolt forward to firmly chamber the next round and (4) slap the bolt closed. All four steps should be completed with the open palm, not the sissy two fingered approach the hollywood soldiers use on their rifles.
The reason for the 'open palm' technique is not to mimic the Harvard Lampoon's Palma Sutra, but to avoid the loss of fingers should a hang-fire detonate during extraction or a live round detonate during cycling. Using two fingers could cost ya a nose picker...................