I was recently gifted an old Win 94 in 38-55 from a friend of an estate.
The gift was due to it being in pieces and believed to be broken.
I went through it and discovered it was actually in good condition (considering its a 1905) and complete.
It was taken apart possibly decades ago due to part of the brass case being stuck in the chamber.
The offending brass is about a centimetre long and approximately a third the circumference and about half way down the chamber.
So I googled what to do (sue me) and tried the cleaning brush reversed pull out...didn’t work.
Then I tried the Cerrosafe method, cast the chamber and punched it out after it was cooled...twice.
Still didn’t work, it sheared the low melt material.
I tried a pick but I don’t want to harm the chamber and I couldn’t get a good bite on it (even ground a pick as a scoop to help).
It’s almost like the offending material has brazed itself to the chamber, that or years of crud hold better than superglue...
So I’m contemplating my next step.
I do not want to harm the gun or it’s patina finish but I want it functional.
I was thinking a reamer would cut it out but the cost and risk have me rattling keys here hoping for an experienced option.
Thanks
The gift was due to it being in pieces and believed to be broken.
I went through it and discovered it was actually in good condition (considering its a 1905) and complete.
It was taken apart possibly decades ago due to part of the brass case being stuck in the chamber.
The offending brass is about a centimetre long and approximately a third the circumference and about half way down the chamber.
So I googled what to do (sue me) and tried the cleaning brush reversed pull out...didn’t work.
Then I tried the Cerrosafe method, cast the chamber and punched it out after it was cooled...twice.
Still didn’t work, it sheared the low melt material.
I tried a pick but I don’t want to harm the chamber and I couldn’t get a good bite on it (even ground a pick as a scoop to help).
It’s almost like the offending material has brazed itself to the chamber, that or years of crud hold better than superglue...
So I’m contemplating my next step.
I do not want to harm the gun or it’s patina finish but I want it functional.
I was thinking a reamer would cut it out but the cost and risk have me rattling keys here hoping for an experienced option.
Thanks