This is a bit of a story, hope you are comfortable.
I am the shooting sports director at a boy scout camp. In the camp season before I was hired, a student used a pre-lubed patch and ball and loaded his rifle. The percussion cap fired, but apparently the powder was moist and did not fire. A ball puller, both regular on a work rod and kinetic, were used with no success. Then I come in the next year to work with no knowledge that there is a shot stuck in one barrel. Thinking there was fouling buildup, I attached a scraper to a work rod and went to work. The scraper became stuck in the lead ball and when I attempted to removed to work rod, the scraper broke off of the rod. So now I have a barrel with a patched lead ball stuck in it with a fouling scaper stuck in the lead ball.
To remove this obstruction, I have soaked the barrel in boiling water, Liquid Wrench, WD-40, blakc powder solvent, and a few other things I cannot recall right now. Basically, noting has loosened the shot. I also have liberally lubricated the bore with bore butter and holding the barrel upside down, tapped the muzzle on a board trying to get the shot out. No dice. Those neat CO2 things that attach to the nipple do not work. Apparently, the patch is bunched up between the ball and the bore because there is a very small passage where the carbon dioxide can escape out the muzzle. I've also tried putting a little water in the nipple area and then freezing the barrel and trying the CO2 again, thinking the ice would seal around the shot. Again, no luck. I also tried putting a few grains of powder in the lock area (it is a sidelock rife) and then replacing the nipple and firing it...no dice. Between using nipple picks and all the liquid soaking, I am fairly certain the charge is dead. A gunsmith at TC said that the breech plug will be hard to get off, since it hasn't been removed in 20 years, since the gun was made. But I was thinking I could clamp the barrel, heat up the area of the breech around the breech plug threads, and use a pipe wrench or vice grips and twist it off. Does that sound like it would work? I would greatly appreciate any suggestion anyone can offer me. Thanks alot
I am the shooting sports director at a boy scout camp. In the camp season before I was hired, a student used a pre-lubed patch and ball and loaded his rifle. The percussion cap fired, but apparently the powder was moist and did not fire. A ball puller, both regular on a work rod and kinetic, were used with no success. Then I come in the next year to work with no knowledge that there is a shot stuck in one barrel. Thinking there was fouling buildup, I attached a scraper to a work rod and went to work. The scraper became stuck in the lead ball and when I attempted to removed to work rod, the scraper broke off of the rod. So now I have a barrel with a patched lead ball stuck in it with a fouling scaper stuck in the lead ball.
To remove this obstruction, I have soaked the barrel in boiling water, Liquid Wrench, WD-40, blakc powder solvent, and a few other things I cannot recall right now. Basically, noting has loosened the shot. I also have liberally lubricated the bore with bore butter and holding the barrel upside down, tapped the muzzle on a board trying to get the shot out. No dice. Those neat CO2 things that attach to the nipple do not work. Apparently, the patch is bunched up between the ball and the bore because there is a very small passage where the carbon dioxide can escape out the muzzle. I've also tried putting a little water in the nipple area and then freezing the barrel and trying the CO2 again, thinking the ice would seal around the shot. Again, no luck. I also tried putting a few grains of powder in the lock area (it is a sidelock rife) and then replacing the nipple and firing it...no dice. Between using nipple picks and all the liquid soaking, I am fairly certain the charge is dead. A gunsmith at TC said that the breech plug will be hard to get off, since it hasn't been removed in 20 years, since the gun was made. But I was thinking I could clamp the barrel, heat up the area of the breech around the breech plug threads, and use a pipe wrench or vice grips and twist it off. Does that sound like it would work? I would greatly appreciate any suggestion anyone can offer me. Thanks alot