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- Jan 12, 2019
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Was cleaning my TC Seneca .45 tonight and the brass bore brush came out of the cleaning rod and is stuck down in the breech area. Any help on how to get it out is much appreciated.
THANK YOU! THANK YOU! THANK YOU! Oh man, I had visions that my hobby of muzzleloading was at an end. Deer season opens Monday and after sighting it in today I was ready to go and now this brush thing happened. I used my tow worm as suggested which has tight coils that ends in a sharp little hook. I fed it down the barrel and made a couple of turns and pulled. Out it came on the first try. Amazing! What was interesting was that the threaded end of the brush fit perfectly inside the toe screw coils so when I turned it, it almost threaded itself into the coil and it just came out easily. Looks like I'm going huntin' after all on Monday. Also, thanks for all the other suggestions, guys. Unfortunately, I won't be able to try them out as I am NEVER going to use a bore brush again!Take a wire clothes hanger and bend it straight make a small hook on the end 1/8 inch,push down
into bristles and twist while pulling. Repeat as it comes out. Also a tow worm screw can grab
enough bristles to hold while you get it out. It is no big issue. Be calm and you will get it out.
Just saw the epoxy idea posted. You can try that as well after mine fails--if it fails you.
Was cleaning my TC Seneca .45 tonight and the brass bore brush came out of the cleaning rod and is stuck down in the breech area. Any help on how to get it out is much appreciated.
Shoot it out instead. A bit more recoil will be felt. It will not harm the barrel. But it does save some extra work. A friend has sent two ramrods down range with the same rifle after being distracted during the loading procedure. The rifle still shoots well.A while back, with my TC hawken, I broke the wood ram rod in the bore, on a live charge . . . .
Bad idea!! See post #13.WHEN ALL ELSE FAILS...,
So my chef buddy, who is my hunting buddy too... his son got a copper bore brush stuck in a rifle. Now the Chef and I do the undersized brush combined with 3-0 or better yet 4-0 steel wool, but the son, got hold of a tight brush. When it jammed, he pushed it back down and then tried to get it out by pulling quick and hard. The idea was sorta "sound"..., that it had merely snagged on some thick crud, and some velocity and more force would dislodge the crud and the brush would come free..., nope. The shaft of the brush did come away...without the bristle portion of the remaining brush, still stuck within.
We tried various worms but these failed too....,
THEN my son suggested we use the solution that modern guys use to get rid of "copper" deposits in modern barrels, left by copper jacketed ammo.
So plugged the nipple hole, added the solution to the barrel, let it sit over night, and ...
VOILA.... dissolved the copper brush bristles like nobody's business....,
My buddy needed a new brush anyway
LD
WHEN ALL ELSE FAILS...,
So my chef buddy, who is my hunting buddy too... his son got a copper bore brush stuck in a rifle. Now the Chef and I do the undersized brush combined with 3-0 or better yet 4-0 steel wool, but the son, got hold of a tight brush. When it jammed, he pushed it back down and then tried to get it out by pulling quick and hard. The idea was sorta "sound"..., that it had merely snagged on some thick crud, and some velocity and more force would dislodge the crud and the brush would come free..., nope. The shaft of the brush did come away...without the bristle portion of the remaining brush, still stuck within.
We tried various worms but these failed too....,
THEN my son suggested we use the solution that modern guys use to get rid of "copper" deposits in modern barrels, left by copper jacketed ammo.
So plugged the nipple hole, added the solution to the barrel, let it sit over night, and ...
VOILA.... dissolved the copper brush bristles like nobody's business....,
My buddy needed a new brush anyway
LD
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