Hey, not all of us live in Chicago.I would take it into my back yard, point it at the ground, close the bolt and pull the trigger. Then turn the bolt to c0ck it again and pull the trigger again. What is unsafe about that?
Hey, not all of us live in Chicago.I would take it into my back yard, point it at the ground, close the bolt and pull the trigger. Then turn the bolt to c0ck it again and pull the trigger again. What is unsafe about that?
Well there you are assuming that the bolt has been left open, or removed...lolNope, that doesn't happen. Pressure is released via the path of least resistance. It always pushes the case backwards out of the chamber.
I don't use steel rods. I make little brass pistons which are turned very close to bore diameter. The head of the piston is left full diameter. The piston end is only a couple of inches long. The bore is not full of oil to the muzzle. The piston is inserted into the bore reaching the oil. The piston stroke might be only half an inch. The mess is at the breech end - when the cartridge is expelled, the oil in the bore will drain. That is why removing the barreled action from the stock is a good idea.You should definitely try that and see how it goes.
I find it best to NOT give out advice you don't understand.
FWIW grease doesn't work because it is basically impossible to totally fill the bore with thick grease without leaving air bubbles and pockets that will compress under pressure. It has to be oil.
The description of this method as "messy" is a wild understatement. When the metal rod is whacked, oil will spurt out of the muzzle at high velocity. The thing about the mechanics of this method is your head and face will naturally be right above the muzzle when you hit the rod. Give that idea a minute to sink in .............
Oh and let's not forget, that jamming a close fitting steel rod into the rifling and then whacking it with a hammer is probably not going to do the rifling any good.
In his post #1, OP described how he was able to remove and examine the bolt. (insert archetypal CGN caustically sarcastic comment here)...lolWell there you are assuming that the bolt has been left open, or removed...lol
I posted a video in post #50 to show how it's done. Some didn't comprehend the purpose of using grease. But once you see how it works it should be easy to understand. Whether it's a pilot bearing or a jammed rifle round...the principle is the sameThat’s how you get a pilot bearing out of a flywheel (pilot bore in the back of a crankshaft). Fill the whole cavity with grease. Get a wooden dowel that fits, wrap it with electrical tape until it fits perfectly then pound it in with a hammer and the bushing should come me right out
Chatham buddyHey, not all of us live in Chicago.
Or Surrey for that matter...Hey, not all of us live in Chicago.
Who has dry ice lying around?remove bolt and scope......put dry ice on the chamber .
No.If I use the steel rod method, that would put the smokeless powder under a lot of pressure. What I'd like to know is will smokeless powder detonate under a crushing pressure?
OP said the bolt won't close. Hammering the bolt closed on a rifle is a bad idea.I would take it into my back yard, point it at the ground, close the bolt and pull the trigger. Then turn the bolt to c0ck it again and pull the trigger again. What is unsafe about that?
That doesn't work. soaking a primer in oil does not deactivate the priming compound. I found a primed case in my pocket after it had gone through the laundry machine and it fired just fine. DO NOT rely on oil to deactivate a primer.Pour oil onto the primer to deactivate the primer if there is room to do so in the breech.
You would try to mechanically remove a stuck case with the bolt inserted and closed? You must be a special kind of person.Well there you are assuming that the bolt has been left open, or removed...lol
I had some rounds stick on me in a Rem 700 in 222, the Hornady dies were very particular and would not properly bump back the shoulder. If you chambered nicely the bolt would sit just shy of full battery but you could slam it down and get close. The dies needed to be adjusted and now I chamber every single sized brass when using those dies before loading. I also picked up a set of Lee dies, no issues sizing with them.I'm away off shore at the moment, I won't be home for awhile to mess with this disaster.
I've done a bit of searching on YouTube myself and read in the comments about putting the barrel in the deep freeze over night, then briefly warming up the barrel before attempting to force out the mess I've created.
After putting some Kroil down the barrel I've already foolishly tried dropping a good fiberglass cleaning rod onto the loaded round to see if it would budge but no luck. I think I might have already used enough force to push the bullet back into the case. Very unsettling.
I was thinking of pouring some water down in there to hopefully foul the powder/primer (if the bullet went in that far) then use Guntech's advice with the steel rod.
From memory the cartridge is a full length sized, 308 Win with 44gr Varget under a 168gr Hornaday A-max bullet.
Before I do anything, and when I finally get back to civilization I'll call Ron Hendrickson. I've used his services before for other gunsmithing. If he can offer a quick turnaround I'll likely go see him first.
Strange how it happened. I shot a nice 3 round group, then I couldn't chamber a 4th.
I removed that round, and chambered it into another gun. I repeated this with 3 or 4 additional rounds, all successfully chambered in the second rifle. I could not see anything obstructing the problem rifle with bolt removed.
I got impatient and chambered a round in hard, which is where I (and that round) got stuck. Typical for myself to learn the hard way, of course right before hunting season.
If I use the steel rod method, that would put the smokeless powder under a lot of pressure. What I'd like to know is will smokeless powder detonate under a crushing pressure?
Hopefully others will learn from my silly mistakes.
If you couldn't tell that was for the, everything needs taught step by step crowd nowadays, that needs safety labels on everything...You would try to mechanically remove a stuck case with the bolt inserted and closed? You must be a special kind of person.![]()
the powder won't but you might drive enough powder down through the flash hole and force the primer anvil to crush the priming compound. if the case is stuck hard in the chamber for whatever reason the case will hold together long enough to send the bullet and anything else in the barrel out with enough force to cause serious injury. the case head will also blow out and send particles of brass and the primer cup back out through the action. not a good day if it goes sideways, it depends on what kind of powder is in the case and how the stars align. it happened in the US to a benchrest competitor's wife who was trying to drive out a round that was stuck in the chamber.The powder will not ignite while the case is being driven out.
I do not believe it is possible to drive powder through the flash hole and cause a primer to fire... but if it did the bullet would not go down the barrel, the case would exit the chamber and action.the powder won't but you might drive enough powder down through the flash hole and force the primer anvil to crush the priming compound. if the case is stuck hard in the chamber for whatever reason the case will hold together long enough to send the bullet and anything else in the barrel out with enough force to cause serious injury. the case head will also blow out and send particles of brass and the primer cup back out through the action. not a good day if it goes sideways, it depends on what kind of powder is in the case and how the stars align. it happened in the US to a benchrest competitor's wife who was trying to drive out a round that was stuck in the chamber.
That’s the new drive by capital is it? Out west the news never mentions “communities” of those involved on either side. They sterilize anything that might point to Liberal mishandling of immigration or funds for fighting crime.Chatham buddy
He did mention shooting into the ground. Now I have it on good authority that in Surrey they all take their guns to the wedding gunsmith then all shoot up into the air to test fire. Possibly an East coast West coast thing?Or Surrey for that matter...




























