Seized Choke Tube

When I did choke tube conversions many years ago, the company supplying the tubes also sold a very small squeeze bottle of anti seize with the recommendation to use it...

Never have ever seen a seized tube that had never seize on it...

As for being messy I think some people can't eat a peanut butter sandwich with getting it all over their face...

Exactly, I have had several people bring me shotguns with stuck choke tubes to remove, and not once did the person use never/anti seize.
 
I've had good luck using muzzleloader breach lock grease (anti seize) with my chokes. The CVA brand I bought is in a chapstick-like tube.

YMMV.
 
Hadn't seen that version, interesting. Thanks for the tip.

If I touch my finger to it, the stuff doesn't even leave a mark. If I rub my finger across it then I get a grey streak, but it wipes off easily with a rag or my pants.

I use a Thompson Center ant-seize product on the breech plug of my muzzle loader called "Gorilla Grease". It comes in a little cup affair like lip balm. Not messy at all and smells like banana. Great stuff. Id expect it to work well on choke tubes but I haven't tried it. I just use oil and check them fairly regularly.

I suspect the issue in this thread has already been pinned down to an inferior choke tube.

Yes, the OPs choke tube was clearly damaged upon use, which I would also call a defective or inferior choke tube.
 
Reading this thread made me so worried about my shot gun. I have had it since 1991 and have used steel shot quite a few times duck and goose hunting over the years. Last years goose hunt I expelled 3 boxes of steel BB shot through a full choke. I was so worried I got up and had to check my choke and barrel everything was fine, and the choke came unscrewed no problem at all. I have also never ever put any sort of anti seize on the threads. I guess I'm lucky. Thanks Winchester 1300.
 
Have a friend of my daughters with a Mossberg 500 he brought me. Fired multiple rounds steel through the full choke for unknown number of years. Soaked 2 days so far with penetration oil, heat and cold treatments and it wont budge. No thread lubricant or anti seize. I cant budge it. I dont think its going to come out...
 
Sounds like the choke has swollen, not surprising. Not sure any amount or type of lube would have helped. It can be machined out by someone who knows what they are doing. Years ago, an acquaintance of mine used a Dremel to cut two longitudinal slots in a frozen choke to relieve the hoop stress. He managed to succeed, but I cant recommend this approach.
 
Sounds like the choke has swollen, not surprising. Not sure any amount or type of lube would have helped. It can be machined out by someone who knows what they are doing. Years ago, an acquaintance of mine used a Dremel to cut two longitudinal slots in a frozen choke to relieve the hoop stress. He managed to succeed, but I cant recommend this approach.

That seems to be the part that so many are missing, if the choke has just sat in the gun for a long time then anti-seize might help but if the choke tube is swollen then it won't make any difference.
 
Considering the nightmare of a time I had getting the old choke out, I will definitely try the antiseize on the new choke, I don't care how messy it gets. :)

This - easy to apply and not messy

https://www.napaonline.com/en/p/NCB37617

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That seems to be the part that so many are missing, if the choke has just sat in the gun for a long time then anti-seize might help but if the choke tube is swollen then it won't make any difference.

I have had many screw chokes guns for 30+ years with zero issues. It’s not that complicated.
 
Considering the nightmare of a time I had getting the old choke out, I will definitely try the antiseize on the new choke, I don't care how messy it gets. :)

Used in moderation as a thin coat, no problem. Get the gun specialty stuff or the Loctite stick and zero problem period.


That seems to be the part that so many are missing, if the choke has just sat in the gun for a long time then anti-seize might help but if the choke tube is swollen then it won't make any difference.

Sure, but anti seize also acts as a nondrying, non baking lubricant, no disadvantage to having it on the threads in advance. Lubrication will not only make removal easier but will help avoid friction damage to the threads on the gun barrel itself as the choke tube is being removed, although if the choke tube is soft enough to deform I guess that danger is slight anyway.
 
Sounds like the choke has swollen, not surprising. Not sure any amount or type of lube would have helped. It can be machined out by someone who knows what they are doing. Years ago, an acquaintance of mine used a Dremel to cut two longitudinal slots in a frozen choke to relieve the hoop stress. He managed to succeed, but I cant recommend this approach.


I've done exactly that to free two stuck chokes. Dremel two grooves longitudinaly most of the way through the threaded portion to relieve the stress the swelling causes, and it will come out. It takes a bit of patience, but it's not difficult to do. Zero damage to the barrel.

PS I use a small amount of high temperature silicone grease on choke threads. It's very clean and I've never had a choke stick in the least. Anti seize is nasty stuff!
 
Used in moderation as a thin coat, no problem. Get the gun specialty stuff or the Loctite stick and zero problem period.




Sure, but anti seize also acts as a nondrying, non baking lubricant, no disadvantage to having it on the threads in advance. Lubrication will not only make removal easier but will help avoid friction damage to the threads on the gun barrel itself as the choke tube is being removed, although if the choke tube is soft enough to deform I guess that danger is slight anyway.

Agreed, and I'm not saying that anti-seize won't do what you say but good synthetic grease doesn't dry or bake either. Just sayin'
 
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