Yup, fully aware of the rifle the OP has. However since the .303 British bore can vary from 0.308" to 0.318" (and we don't know what bore he has) my statement stands.
If the OP's bore was .318, his projectile probably wouldn't have gotten stuck lol
Yup, fully aware of the rifle the OP has. However since the .303 British bore can vary from 0.308" to 0.318" (and we don't know what bore he has) my statement stands.
If you try to shoot the stuck bullet out you risk the chance of a bulged barrel, I'm not questioning Ganderite's advice but this same procedure has resulted in bulged barrels in the past.
The powder charge would depend on where the bullet is stuck and how thick the barrel is at this point. Meaning there is a reason why the chamber has the thickest metal surrounding it and where the peak pressure develops.
Do you use a quick burning powder like trail Boss or a slow power like H4831?
Below is my practice load for my AR15 rifles and the pressure peaks at three inches down the barrel.
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Below is my lite practice load for my .44 magnum and the pressure peaks at less than 1 1/2 inches down the barrel.
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So my question is at what chamber pressure and at what point down the barrel is safe to shoot a stuck bullet. Meaning at what point do you want to reach peak pressure and also "how" much pressure.
I was too chicken to try this and shoot out the bullet and just used a brass rod to pound out the bullet.
A light load to pop it out easily enough, No pressure issue due to the space/ maybe a little wadding to hold the powder inLoad more ammo for next visit to the range. Bring with you one primed case and some powder in sealed container with about the same charge of what you were using. At the range charge the empty primed case with powder charge and with rifle pointing up in your left hand carefully insert charged case in to the chamber and close the bolt. Point rifle down range and fire at the target. Check bore after and if clear,
Load more rounds in the mag and blast away
Out of curiosity. Why the short piece and not just the long piece?
The replies saying that the primer fired are quite correct. When you have clumped, discolored powder, the primer has fired. As mentioned, this can happen with very light loads, but also can happen with spoiled powder, like when the powder has been exposed to air for a length of time letting the solvent evaporate out of it.
"the powder that was inside the brass was clumped and yellow."
I am not a reloader, but what powder is yellow?