- Location
- Haliburton County, Central Ontario
Picked up a ' Xinan' (made in China) imported to North America by Norinco at one point. It's a Mauser 98 clone in .308 Win (or so it is stamped on the barrel). Being a prudent shooter of all things Chinese, I ran the chamber gauges through this rifle to find that it swallowed the 'field' gauge with no stop in sight. I am not going to shoot it this way, of course, for fear of bad results up close and personal. I would like, however, to make a project out of it by removing the barrel and setting the head space correctly by machining (i.e. hand filing) the mating surfaces carefully until the chamber meets the spec.
I have tried already at this point to remove the barrel by loading the receiver securely in a vise, heating the receiver with a propane torch (some kind of dark non combustible liquid emerged from the seam between the barrel and the receiver during the heating process), and applying an incredible amount of torque to the barrel using a pipe wrench with a 4' pipe extension. No joy. Nary a millimeter's movement. Any ideas? I don't even know if I should be twisting clockwise or counter-clockwise. It should be apparent that I have never removed a barrel before...
At this point, with very little $$ into the rifle, I am not concerned about cosmetic implications of the disassembly process.
I have tried already at this point to remove the barrel by loading the receiver securely in a vise, heating the receiver with a propane torch (some kind of dark non combustible liquid emerged from the seam between the barrel and the receiver during the heating process), and applying an incredible amount of torque to the barrel using a pipe wrench with a 4' pipe extension. No joy. Nary a millimeter's movement. Any ideas? I don't even know if I should be twisting clockwise or counter-clockwise. It should be apparent that I have never removed a barrel before...
At this point, with very little $$ into the rifle, I am not concerned about cosmetic implications of the disassembly process.




















































