I've seen references to use a grease fitting in the nipple or vent seat so grease can be pumped in to force out a bore obstruction. I can now speak from personal hands on experience that it does indeed work and only took about 30 minutes...the astounding wonder is that I somehow happened to even have a grease fitting in a scrounge box...AND...that it was 1/4" x 28...anyone care to calulate the odds on that???
Anyhow I learned way back in ML-101 not to use ramrods unless their ends were pinned, and not to use bore brushes that were crimped on; Sometime in the past, probably at a Walmart, I stumbled across a sale and picked up a couple of TC Universal Lightweight tubular aluminum ramrods...I saw the telltale ends of the silver pins on either side of the black aluminum shaft, so I bought them and stuck them aside.
Gearing up for my new .40cal, I pulled out those two new rods, put a patch retriever on one and a bore brush on the other. Cleaning the .40cal today I pushed the bore brush down, expected it to be snug, turned the shaft clockwise to loosen the bristles like I always do and when I began pulling the brush back up, the rod pulled right off the accessory adapter..
THE ENDS WEREN'T PINNED AT ALL...THE TWO TINY SILVER PIN ENDS ARE JUST "SPOTS" MADE TO LOOK LIKE THE ENDS OF PINS...TOTALLY FALSE !!!!
Turns out the accessory adapter was simply a press fit into the hollow tube and actually stops 1/8" shy of where the two make-believe pins ends are marked on the ramrod!!!!!
Anyhow, my first thought was run to the hardware store and get a thin walled piece of tubing but seeing how small the .40cal bore was I was worried I wouldn't be able to find one that small and waste a lot of time looking.
Dug around in a scrounge box and to my absolute shock not only did I find a greas fitting but it had 1/4" x 28 threads...so before screwing it in, I cut up small pieces of patch material and packed them into the vent so the grease wouldn't just ooze past the bristles, screwed in the fitting, and pumped that thing right up out of the bore.
Dry patched the bore with a half dozen patches, put the barrel right back in the hot soapy water, and recleaned the barrel normally.
Summary:
1) Don't trust a cheap hollow aluminum ramrod to have pinned ends unless you have a way of actually proving to yourself that they are pinned;
2) Go buy yourself a 99 cent grease fitting now;
Anyhow I learned way back in ML-101 not to use ramrods unless their ends were pinned, and not to use bore brushes that were crimped on; Sometime in the past, probably at a Walmart, I stumbled across a sale and picked up a couple of TC Universal Lightweight tubular aluminum ramrods...I saw the telltale ends of the silver pins on either side of the black aluminum shaft, so I bought them and stuck them aside.
Gearing up for my new .40cal, I pulled out those two new rods, put a patch retriever on one and a bore brush on the other. Cleaning the .40cal today I pushed the bore brush down, expected it to be snug, turned the shaft clockwise to loosen the bristles like I always do and when I began pulling the brush back up, the rod pulled right off the accessory adapter..
THE ENDS WEREN'T PINNED AT ALL...THE TWO TINY SILVER PIN ENDS ARE JUST "SPOTS" MADE TO LOOK LIKE THE ENDS OF PINS...TOTALLY FALSE !!!!
Turns out the accessory adapter was simply a press fit into the hollow tube and actually stops 1/8" shy of where the two make-believe pins ends are marked on the ramrod!!!!!
Anyhow, my first thought was run to the hardware store and get a thin walled piece of tubing but seeing how small the .40cal bore was I was worried I wouldn't be able to find one that small and waste a lot of time looking.
Dug around in a scrounge box and to my absolute shock not only did I find a greas fitting but it had 1/4" x 28 threads...so before screwing it in, I cut up small pieces of patch material and packed them into the vent so the grease wouldn't just ooze past the bristles, screwed in the fitting, and pumped that thing right up out of the bore.
Dry patched the bore with a half dozen patches, put the barrel right back in the hot soapy water, and recleaned the barrel normally.
Summary:
1) Don't trust a cheap hollow aluminum ramrod to have pinned ends unless you have a way of actually proving to yourself that they are pinned;
2) Go buy yourself a 99 cent grease fitting now;