What, exactly, should one do when a misfire occurs? For instance, during fire forming, with the bullet jambed into the lands. Thanks.
What is your definition of a misfire? Did it just go click, or did it fizzle? If it didn't fire at all you can immediately extract it. If it made more noise than just the hammer drop, wait at least 5 minutes or so in case you had what is called a hangfire.
In any of the above, make sure the bore is not restricted before going further.
Thanks Jerry. The "how long to wait" was one of my questions.
With a jambed bullet, one would like to avoid spilling the powder into the chamber and action.....so is it ok to open the bolt and tap the bullet and cartridge back with a cleaning rod?
Thanks Jerry. The "how long to wait" was one of my questions.
With a jambed bullet, one would like to avoid spilling the powder into the chamber and action.....so is it ok to open the bolt and tap the bullet and cartridge back with a cleaning rod?
One more thing. If you stick a cleaning rod down the barrel from the muzzle, for any reason never, never, take your hand off the rod till it is out of the barrel. Two benchrest shooters have already died from going from the muzzle to dislodge a stuck bullet.
Make a false shoulder?
A little tip I was taught that helps!!!!
Before you open the bolt tip your rifle up on the butt plate. By doing so this reduces the chance of spilling powder out into your chamber and trigger.
And getting powder every where just makes your day go to poo. Ask me how I know lol
I'd like to suggest that before pointing the muzzle in an unsafe direction raise your bolt until the camming surfaces make contact. At this point the firing pin is not in contact with the primer and cannot reach the primer if the firing pin was inadvertently left in the cocked position.
Not necessary on a ppc. Thats for like a dasher where the shoulder is way far away. A ppc has to be bumped back so just bump it to where it fits like a fired case. Never had an issue like this on a ppc and nobody else i know have either
If you have rotated the bolt completely to the point it will move reward in the action then yes it's impossible for the firing pin to touch the primer. Now with that being said the last thing you want to do is drive a live round out with a cleaning rod. People die doing that. The safest way is to remove the barrel and work on it that way. Never ever drive a bullet back into the powder column.
Like I said I must have missed something in the instructions.
It's been at least thirteen years since I prepared and turned any cases. I sort of remember a step to run the cases through a die to straighten the walls. I think at this step I didn't have a die that would touch the 220 Russian or resize the neck in anyway that would cause the neck sizing rod to stretch out the neck. Looking back though my dies now I see one I may have gotten that will work but I dropped the sport for a while and am once again trying to sort everything out.
If you have rotated the bolt completely to the point it will move reward in the action then yes it's impossible for the firing pin to touch the primer. Now with that being said the last thing you want to do is drive a live round out with a cleaning rod. People die doing that. The safest way is to remove the barrel and work on it that way. Never ever drive a bullet back into the powder column.
What, exactly, should one do when a misfire occurs? For instance, during fire forming, with the bullet jambed into the lands. Thanks.