No heat treatment on a barrel. It is soft steel and heating it to plastic melting temperature wouldn't affect any integrity.
Not seeing totally your situation, I am assuming the air is blowing past your jag. I would try this: Make a rubber plug at least 3/8" thick that will fit as tight as a RB with patch, lube the plug with grease and slide it down against the jag. Squirt some WD40 in the TH. Take a rag and grease the bore with a film of grease. Now, try your air using some high pressure on the TH with the gun in a safe direction. The plug seal should help make the compressed air do the job.So I have this older pedersoli Flintlock it was made in the late 1960s. It's a 32 Caliber Kentucky squirrel rifle. I broke off a cleaning Jag down in the bore. After some thought I finally decided on dribbling some fine black powder in through the touch hole and try to shoot it out. First try was a near success only about 6 in from the end of the barrel. Of course I had to push it back down to try again so I don't make a short start. And unfortunately I pushed it too far down in front of the touch hole. Now I can't do anything regarding shooting it out. It's a plastic cleaning Jag I am considering welding a self-tapping screw to the end of a steel rod to try to extract it. I'm giving up for today I was really hoping for a win on this one I just got done making a new mainspring and I want to shoot it. I'm open for any suggestions. I already tried compressed air that was a no-go.
Actually it was making a perfect seal the problem was that 120 lb of air wasn't budging itNot seeing totally your situation, I am assuming the air is blowing past your jag. I would try this: Make a rubber plug at least 3/8" thick that will fit as tight as a RB with patch, lube the plug with grease and slide it down against the jag. Squirt some WD40 in the TH. Take a rag and grease the bore with a film of grease. Now, try your air using some high pressure on the TH with the gun in a safe direction. The plug seal should help make the compressed air do the job.
Good luck
Larry
That’s what victory looks like.
I didn't doubt your seal at the TH! My suggestion is saying the air might be blowing around and past the jag. The air is not keeping or building up pressure. There is no seal inside the barrel. Just my guess. What have you got to loose? Oh, maybe the jag and plug.Actually it was making a perfect seal the problem was that 120 lb of air wasn't budging it
No I really met the cleaning Jag and oily patch combo was actually a good seal. Very little blow by anyway.I didn't doubt your seal at the TH! My suggestion is saying the air might be blowing around and past the jag. The air is not keeping or building up pressure. There is no seal inside the barrel. Just my guess. What have you got to loose? Oh, maybe the jag and plug.
Larry
Maybe a collared ball puller?Your idea should work but I would consider brazing a brass screw to a brass rod, as there is less chance of damaging the barrel.
Why did they cease production?They quit manufacturing a map gas unfortunately
Maybe a collared ball puller?
Maybe not but a big pile of them with some pepper sauce would at least make him feel better about the situation.Being a Southern boy by birth I was brought up eating collards, tasty but I don't think they'd harden up enough to use as a ball puller.
Well, at least I didn't make the mistake of calling it a **Deleted** ball puller. That would have launched a fusillade of responses. None of which I would care for.Being a Southern boy by birth I was brought up eating collards, tasty but I don't think they'd harden up enough to use as a ball puller.
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