Why would you think that, as long as you don't change the class of gun, ie cutting to 3 or 4 inch , it is not a problem.Shortening the barrel is not legal afaik.
You probably got a bullet stuck near the end of the barrel and the next bullet fired pushed it out along with itself. The type of ammo doesn't matter but "I haven’t had a squib in at least a dozen range sessions" definitely isn't a good standard. Are you reloading? If so, what's the load exactly?
Yeah, I do load but last squib I had was during load development for vectan a1, that got stuck right at the forcing cone and was tapped out immediately. before that according my notes, was an h110 load that didn’t ignite properly and was also stuck at the forcing cone about a year and a half ago.I agree lol
Thanks for the advice- I’m waiting for my preferred gunsmith in BC to clear his backlog and will probably go this route at some point. Got a ton of milsurp rifles with a counterbore and hadn’t even considered that a pistol could have that done.If it still shoots okay - shoot it... It will not harm anything. If the accuracy is lacking, rather than cut the barrel have a smith use a piloted reamer and counter bore from the muzzle removing the bulged bore. Then it will shoot fine and no need to make ugly changes on the exterior of the barrel.
Bulges that end in the muzzle affect accuracy badly... bulges down the bore a ways not so much.
As much nonsense it may sound, There is a huge difference from legal prospective if you cut existing barrel below 18” or refit with another barrel below 18”. In former case you ended up with prohib device no matter what. In latter case you need to update registration with different length if it remains of restricted length. That is - cut the barrel from 6” to 5” is Nono. Unscrew 6” and put 5” is ok.Why would you think that, as long as you don't change the class of gun, ie cutting to 3 or 4 inch , it is not a problem.
The cert. should be changed, but you have 30 days to do that.
Is it actually possible to have an authoritative bang AND stick the bullet?
Normally, an overpressure load will result in case failure, primer flattening, excessive recoil, or even catastrophic failure at the weakest point—usually the cylinder in a revolver like the 686. However, in rare cases, it could cause a bulge in the barrel, but only under specific conditions.Just out of curiosity, how would an over pressured load create a bulge without some type of obstruction?
Agreed.Why would you think that, as long as you don't change the class of gun, ie cutting to 3 or 4 inch , it is not a problem.
The cert. should be changed, but you have 30 days to do that.
Yes.I personally havent ever experienced a "squib"
I've loaded a lot of pistol rounds... havent ever had one fail to go bang with authority...even a 2.7gr bullseye 148gr WC 38spl has "authority". My understanding is a squib is a pop and not a bang. If I ever experienced a 'pop' and not a 'bang', I'd stop and evaluate.
Is it actually possible to have an authoritative bang AND stick the bullet?
I did not notice any difference in the sound of the shot and the RO said the same.
Not one of the squib loads sounded any different from a fully charged round.
Doesn't the definition refer to a firearm adapted from a rifle or shotgun?As much nonsense it may sound, There is a huge difference from legal prospective if you cut existing barrel below 18” or refit with another barrel below 18”. In former case you ended up with prohib device no matter what. In latter case you need to update registration with different length if it remains of restricted length. That is - cut the barrel from 6” to 5” is Nono. Unscrew 6” and put 5” is ok.
Strange that guntech with claimed 53 years of experience did not explain that. No any reputable gunsmith will cutoff restricted barrels further down. Only replace them with another one.
I also did not believe it until my gunsmith explained it. NFA site has an article on that too.
Buy a new barrel from Numrich whatever size you like and move on.
Hope it helps.
Believe what you like. I have no idea if there was any powder in the cases, or just a little. I suspect no powder. The primer had just enough power to push the bullet out of the casing and prevent the next round from chambering. If the bullet had gone farther down the barrel bad things would have happened.I find this hard to believe. Could you possibly have had a different kind of issue that was causing the problem? What was the load? Upon investigation, how much powder was actually in the cases of those faulty loads?
If shooters couldn't audibly hear squibs loads guns would be exploding all over the place! lol.
Believe what you like. I have no idea if there was any powder in the cases, or just a little. I suspect no powder. The primer had just enough power to push the bullet out of the casing and prevent the next round from chambering. If the bullet had gone farther down the barrel bad things would have happened.