Savage 99 stuck case

Niscola

New member
Rating - 0%
0   0   0
so my buddy has a stuck case in his savage 99 in 308 (base of the case broke off and the rest of the case is stuck in the chamber). tried to get it to catch on a brush but no joy. if i could get the barrel off i'm sure i could get it out with an easy out

how do i go about taking the barrel off? or should i just take it to a smith?
 
Read the "22 hornet case broke in chamber" thread shown below your thread.
Try threading a tap in the case as suggested by "the wrench"

i have read that thread. but it being a 99 (lever action) i can't get at the tap with a wrench once its in there. i need to remove the barrel to do that
 
Try putting the gun in the freezer overnight, then try the cleaning brush , just started into the case then reversed. It might work, the case and barrel expand at different rates and may separate enough to let the brush work. GOOD LUCK.
 
well after a few days of messing around my friend decided to go with the brute strenght and ignorance method. split the brass with a screwdriver and hammer and pulled it out with pliers. now he has the same problem the cases won't extract and when you finally get them out there's a bit scratch on the outside of the cases. so something must be wrong with the chamber now

its not his primary hunting riffle so he's pretty much given up on it. put it in the closet and hopes it fixes itself....

its a shame to see a nice riffle like that just sit there broken. i guess its gonna have to go to the smith sometime

thanks for the help guys
 
Yes, He has damaged the chamber with the screwdriver. The roughness in the chamber is causing the extraction problem. Sometimes it is better to spend a few bucks at the smith's than to get all excited and screw up the works. The scratch may polish out....or it may not. Only a trip to the smith will establish which. Too bad. Eagleye.
 
This may not be related but... my hunting buddy had a Savage 99C in .308 that served him well for years. For no reason the rifle started to have issues with stuck cases. A gunsmith took a plastic cast of the chamber and found that the chamber had taken an odd shape compared to what it should be. We blamed it on a steady diet of Hornady Light magnum .308's. Since then I learned that maybe the 99 action (lengthened to accomodate the .308 and .243) may not be up to a steady diet of .308 ammo pressure ammo. Before all the 99 owners in .308 jump on me I just thought I would note this. I have a 99EG from the '40's (.300) that has shot thousands of rounds with no incident.. interesting.

regards, Darryl
 
To bad about the chamber. Its probably going to be a minimum of $200.00 to set the barrel back a couple of turns, re-index the sights and or hanger, re-chamber and set the forearm back to match up with the hanger. I seldom try to give people advice on stuff stuck in barrels. There are enough disasters happening out there without me trying to add to it. I have seen guys drill out half their rifling trying to drill out stuck bullets. Bent barrels trying to do the same thing by pounding bullets out with brass rods. I have seen 2 brass rods stuck in barrels because the ends flared from impacting on stuck bullets. I have seen rifling damaged by wandering wood screws. I once saw a chamber that a guy had threaded. In other cases the neck and throat trying to remove the case with a tap. A classic was a guy that had re-chambered his gun by trying to get a broken case out with an easy out. I have seen cases where guys have tried to beet out loaded rounds with cleaning rods. In one case a guy who tried to pry a loaded round out of a 94 take down with a screw driver to the point that the primer was crushed. Why that one did not go boom is beyond me. I guess he was being followed by a moon shadow. The hammer and screw driver trick? That has been done to DEATH! Stuck bullets, cases and live rounds are disgustingly simple to remove if you have a barrel and action wrench, lathe, mill a full gauntlet of drills and taps. An oxyacetylene torch, TIG and a ten ton press can come in handy as well. I had one apprentice years ago that was exceptional. Not because he did great work but because he would often walk up to me or Larry mid way through a job and say (show me how to do this because I can’t see any way of doing it without creating a disaster). Turned out to be a pretty good gunsmith but in the end left to work as a machinist. Guess he was smarter than me! Rod
 
Back
Top Bottom