This topic comes up quite often.
Every time it does, someone will suggest using a wooden dowel to poke the thing out.
This is really bad advice.
I just cleared the barrel of a USM1870 .50 Trapdoor rifle. Fired case had stuck. Someone tried to dig it out unsuccessfully. Damaged the chamber in the process. Then drove in a wooden dowel, breaking it off about 4" in from the muzzle.
I removed the barrel from the receiver, so I could get at the case. Put the barrel in the lathe, center drilled a hole in the casing. Ran in a brad point drill mounted on the end of a rod, through the hole in the case head. Got a hole through the dowel. Removed the case. Mounted a brass slug on the end of a 3/8" steel rod. Turned it to just under bore diameter. Drove it in, collapsing the dowel. Drilled some more. Drove the slug in some more. Kept at it until the remains of the dowel were driven out. The dowel was there long enough that the bore may be rusted beyond salvation, in addition to the damaged chamber. I could install a short sleeve in the chamber mouth to repair the damage, if the bore is usable.
Suppose the thing could be sleeved or smoothbored. .410 sleeved or 24ga bored out might options.
Every time it does, someone will suggest using a wooden dowel to poke the thing out.
This is really bad advice.
I just cleared the barrel of a USM1870 .50 Trapdoor rifle. Fired case had stuck. Someone tried to dig it out unsuccessfully. Damaged the chamber in the process. Then drove in a wooden dowel, breaking it off about 4" in from the muzzle.
I removed the barrel from the receiver, so I could get at the case. Put the barrel in the lathe, center drilled a hole in the casing. Ran in a brad point drill mounted on the end of a rod, through the hole in the case head. Got a hole through the dowel. Removed the case. Mounted a brass slug on the end of a 3/8" steel rod. Turned it to just under bore diameter. Drove it in, collapsing the dowel. Drilled some more. Drove the slug in some more. Kept at it until the remains of the dowel were driven out. The dowel was there long enough that the bore may be rusted beyond salvation, in addition to the damaged chamber. I could install a short sleeve in the chamber mouth to repair the damage, if the bore is usable.
Suppose the thing could be sleeved or smoothbored. .410 sleeved or 24ga bored out might options.