bigfellascott wrote:I take it you checked to make sure the safety hasn't been accidentally put on after firing? I think some of em lock the bolt when on?
bigfellascott wrote:I take it you checked to make sure the safety hasn't been accidentally put on after firing? I think some of em lock the bolt when on?
tom604 wrote:handloads?
Chronos wrote:What brand if rifle is it?
Chronos wrote:Was it handloads ammunition?
Chronos wrote:Do you grease the locking lugs?
pmomd wrote:Ideas what happened?
Oldbloke wrote:Now this is just an idea. No expert here. If brass has different coefficient of expansion to steel ( & I suspect it does) You could try removing the scope, stock & mag and placing just the action in the freezer for say an hour. If the brass contracts at a greater rate than the steel should just release. Its an old engineering trick. Same idea as warming a bearing to shrink it onto a cold axel. I cant see that it will do any harm. Any opinions out there?
pmomd wrote:Fixed the bugger
Got a mate with a cleaning rod in there, took a herculean effort to lift the bolt but it did move slowly. Each tap of the rod jumped it forward.
Took a 15-20 taps and it suddenly sprung free. Very happy.
Can't really see anything wrong with the brass, nothing has split or separated.
It could be swelled but I'm not game to push it back in to see where it sticks.
Anyway, sorted. Thanks to all.
Westy wrote:I'd try the opposite and use a heat gun to heat up the surrounding action and see if you cant loosen the bolt with a little bit of heat..... Also I'm a Wildman and have used a piece of timber (4x2) Hardwood as a drift to help move the bolt more than once worked for me but hell I'm a balls and all type of guy !!!!!! Sure use the lubes but I also like jacks idea should work ????![]()
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pmomd wrote:Fixed the bugger
Got a mate with a cleaning rod in there, took a herculean effort to lift the bolt but it did move slowly. Each tap of the rod jumped it forward.
Took a 15-20 taps and it suddenly sprung free. Very happy.
Can't really see anything wrong with the brass, nothing has split or separated.
It could be swelled but I'm not game to push it back in to see where it sticks.
Anyway, sorted. Thanks to all.
Oldbloke wrote:Well glad that worked out. Having thought more about it because of the large volume of steel compared to brass westy could be right and heating the barrel may have been a better way to go. We wont find out now, good to see its out.
Warrigul wrote:Just to be totally certain you could pull the bolt totally apart and check to be sure there is nothing in there and that the firing pin and spring are intact, a stuck case is sometimes incorrectly blamed until it occurs again down the track(sometimes there is nothing to blame but the case). Is the primer on that case and the previous rounds complete?