Stuck Case, .303 British Case Separation

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Any tips on getting to forward 80% or so of a separated case out of the chamber of my Jungle Carbine? Almost always a simple scribe or similar tool can be used to extract them but not this time. The casing is basically glued to the chamber it seems. The is no lip either side to push on, I imagine those purpose built extractors would do nicely but I can't find one.
 
Another option is to use a tap normally used to cut threads. Simply screw it into the casing, and then either pull on the tap or tap on it using a cleaning rod or dowel inserted in the bore. Good luck.
 
Try the bore brush. It almost always works and there is no risk as there might be if you use a tap.
 
A thread tap with an extension has worked for me every time. Maybe I'm just lucky but I have never had to use a hammer, just turn it by hand an the case has always loosened and pulled right out. Used it more than a dozen times (3 times on the same gun before I convinced the guns owner to get some new brass,,, LOL)

 
Removed stuck cases several times with no damage to gun in less than a minute. Remove bolt , insert a socket where the bolt was with an appropriate sized lag screw into the chamber.It must be large enough to enter the case but bite into the shoulder neck area of the stuck case.Give it 1/4 turn till you feel it bite into the brass,remove socket leaving lag screw in stuck case.A wooden block or non-marring object is placed by hand in the action to pry against to protect the action. Use a screw driver under the lag screw head to gently pry away from the chamber. it's out in less time it took to type this............Harold
 
In my forty -plus years of gunsmithing professionally, I have removed dozens of separated cases with a cleaning brush and have seen at least a dozen rifles in which the chambers had been damaged with a tap or a drill bit. A tap can do the job if the case is stuck but trust me, try the brush first.
 
In my forty -plus years of gunsmithing professionally, I have removed dozens of separated cases with a cleaning brush and have seen at least a dozen rifles in which the chambers had been damaged with a tap or a drill bit. A tap can do the job if the case is stuck but trust me, try the brush first.

This has been my experience as well... chambers are easily damaged by the inexperienced inserting sharp tooling.

and if a brush doesn't work I have plugged the neck of the case and put epoxy in the body of the case and when hard simply tapped the case out with a cleaning rod...
 
If I read you right, the "front 80% and happens often" means your headspace is likely bad, and the issues will only get worse. In my limited experience with bad .303 ammo it comes apart at the neck...I have a bunch of Korean War stuff that did that.
 
you know, 303 is the easiest rifle to remove a stuck separated case from because its tapered, just load another round and push the bolt home fairly hard. it will push the new round into the rear of the stuck case and jam in now simply extract both works 99 out of 100. ive don't it lots.
 
once the casing is out clean the chamber well, a small amount of corrosion can hang them up. Also headspace your rifle, most likely cause of a separated head is bad head spacing unless the casing was reloaded a few times.
 
in a 38 cal rifle, I have used a brass rod to push a lead slug down the bore, from the muzzle. Works and does not damage the bore or the chamber. The Cerrosafe method sounds like it has potential but you need to have some Cerrosafe to do it

cheers mooncoon
 
My loading has caught up with me I think. I have gone hundreds of rounds without any issues since inheriting the gun but last time out I had 2 separations and 2 that nearly separated. Neck sizing helps extend brass life but apparently not forever unfortunately. It also doesn't help that some of the brass I scrounged up was obviously fired from rifles much looser than mine. I don't have any cerro safe but I do have epoxy. I will plug and put some into the case body then try tapping it out.
 
It does require a certain amt of finesse with the lag screw approach,I wasn't talking about a back woods caveman approach .The chamber will be unscathed if you have the touch.The screw threads only contact the inside of the brass .....nothing else.Cleaning rod and brush was NFG as well as jam and ram another rd in the chamber. I happened mostly on a Savage 340 .22 with a sloppy chamber /weak extraction with moderate loads.
 
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