Case Separation

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  • Mark Daiute
    Senior Member
    • Aug 2009
    • 654

    #1

    Case Separation

    Shooting the weekend before last I had a case separate at the neck. Some of that piece of case is in the very end of the chamber and maybe, just a little in the lead.

    I have tried and failed to remove it.

    Any ideas or help would be appreciated.

    I'm wondering if a .32 caliber cleaning jag might just slide down the bore but then fetch up and remove the piece of case.

    Thanks,

    Mark
    "A man with a tractor and a chain saw has no excuses, nor does he need any"
    Me. "Consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds" Emerson "Consistency is the darling of those that stack wood or cast bullets" Me.
  • Tom Trevor
    Senior Member
    • Aug 2009
    • 566

    #2
    Mark, Put a tight cleaning patch in the barrel just ahead of the chamber then melt some cerro safe [used for chamber casts] pour it into the chamber let it cool a few minutes and push out from muzzle. Works every time.
    Once in a while an oversize bore brush will work. Hope this helps.

    Comment

    • Mark Daiute
      Senior Member
      • Aug 2009
      • 654

      #3
      thanks, Tom, I'm on it!
      "A man with a tractor and a chain saw has no excuses, nor does he need any"
      Me. "Consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds" Emerson "Consistency is the darling of those that stack wood or cast bullets" Me.

      Comment

      • Mark Daiute
        Senior Member
        • Aug 2009
        • 654

        #4
        1 lb of Cerrosafe on it's way! Chamber casts!
        "A man with a tractor and a chain saw has no excuses, nor does he need any"
        Me. "Consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds" Emerson "Consistency is the darling of those that stack wood or cast bullets" Me.

        Comment

        • psteinmayer
          Senior Member
          • Sep 2011
          • 1527

          #5
          I didn't even see that it was you posting the same thing on the KCA forum Mark... I must have still been asleep, LOL. Have you tried grabbing it with a pick or the turned end of a scribe? I'm guessing you already did... but I thought I would throw it out there anyway.

          Let us know how you finally got it out!

          Paul
          "I was home... What happened? What the Hell Happened?" - MM1 Jacob Holman, USS San Pablo

          Comment

          • joem
            Senior Member, Deceased
            • Aug 2009
            • 11835

            #6
            I have used a plumbers steel brush, the kind they use to clean the inside of copper fittings prior to soldering. Jam it in and twist and pull the offending chunk out.

            Comment

            • gpw_42
              Senior Member
              • Sep 2009
              • 166

              #7
              Have you tried freezing the barreled action? I've read that can be useful, as the brass freezes faster than the steel. Never tried it myself.

              Steve

              Comment

              • jon_norstog
                Senior Member
                • Sep 2009
                • 3896

                #8
                Odd, now that you think of it. I've never had a case separation in a Krag. They headspace on the case rim, not the shoulder. I did have separation problems in a Lee rifle I bought; a previous owner had apparently tried to make a 30-40 Improved out of it using I would guess a drill bit.

                I took the rifle back to the sop where I bought it, Ron Peterson's in Albuquerque. He wasn't happy about fixing it, but I wouldn't leave and I wouldn't give him an excuse to throw me out of his shop, so he sent it to the gunsmith he had doing his repairs.

                That was how I met Jim Bedeaux and his son Roy. Arquebusiers extraordinaire!

                jn

                Comment

                • madsenshooter
                  Senior Member
                  • Aug 2009
                  • 1476

                  #9
                  Someday something like that is going to happen to me. I have some cases that I have no idea how many times they've been reloaded. I bought one of those ruptured case extractors a long time ago, but haven't had to use it yet. Those cases are relegated to cast bullet loading now. I recently discovered that if I size my bullets .3145", and keep the cases in the same rifle, I don't have to size the cases at all. Just deprime, reload.
                  "I have sworn upon the Altar of God, eternity hostility upon all forms of tyranny over the minds of man." - Thomas Jefferson

                  Comment

                  • joem
                    Senior Member, Deceased
                    • Aug 2009
                    • 11835

                    #10
                    I have case seperations in a old Danish RB. I use the steel brush since there is no broken shell extractor made. Works every time.

                    Comment

                    • Mark Daiute
                      Senior Member
                      • Aug 2009
                      • 654

                      #11
                      Originally posted by madsenshooter
                      Someday something like that is going to happen to me. I have some cases that I have no idea how many times they've been reloaded. I bought one of those ruptured case extractors a long time ago, but haven't had to use it yet. Those cases are relegated to cast bullet loading now. I recently discovered that if I size my bullets .3145", and keep the cases in the same rifle, I don't have to size the cases at all. Just deprime, reload.
                      Bob, the simple fact that you DO have the extractor is insurance enough that you will never, ever need it. The reverse corollary is that should you loose track of the extractor you are guaranteed to have a case separation.
                      "A man with a tractor and a chain saw has no excuses, nor does he need any"
                      Me. "Consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds" Emerson "Consistency is the darling of those that stack wood or cast bullets" Me.

                      Comment

                      • Mark Daiute
                        Senior Member
                        • Aug 2009
                        • 654

                        #12
                        Color me "LOSER"

                        The Cerrosafe came and I melted it on the kitchen stove in a lead ladle I have, a big one, big enough for pouring ingots.

                        Poured the Cerrosafe into the chamber and left home for a couple hours.

                        Now, keep in mind I plugged the barrel with a brass brush wrapped with a patch on the end of my Dewey cleaning rod.

                        So, I come home expecting to tap, tap, tap the whole mess out. Tap,. tap, tap, no movement.


                        some of the Cerrosafe is in the locking lug recess so I take the action out of the stock and judiciously apply a propane torch and melt the Cerrosafe out of the locking lug recess in the receiver.


                        Tap, tap, tap. No joy.

                        So I melt some more out of the chamber. Tap, Rap, Hammer! Nothing.

                        I mashed over the end of my Dewey cleaning rod, miraculously I rapped on the end and it is back in place and still swivels. A miracle I do not deserve at this point but at least something went in my favor.

                        I'm concerned about the receiver, the end of it was on a rug the whole time I was doing this rapping on the rod. Don't want to take any chances bending or breaking it.

                        I will now cease and desist until such time as I can find someone with a barrel vise and a brass rod.

                        Sigh.
                        Last edited by Mark Daiute; 11-14-2015, 03:00.
                        "A man with a tractor and a chain saw has no excuses, nor does he need any"
                        Me. "Consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds" Emerson "Consistency is the darling of those that stack wood or cast bullets" Me.

                        Comment

                        • Mark Daiute
                          Senior Member
                          • Aug 2009
                          • 654

                          #13
                          just re-read toms post "let it cool for a few minutes" I bet that's where I went wrong. I let it cool for serveral hours and I understand that it expands a fair amount.

                          If I get the courage up a melt it all out.

                          M
                          "A man with a tractor and a chain saw has no excuses, nor does he need any"
                          Me. "Consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds" Emerson "Consistency is the darling of those that stack wood or cast bullets" Me.

                          Comment

                          • Mark Daiute
                            Senior Member
                            • Aug 2009
                            • 654

                            #14
                            My rifle is ok and back in action, almost. Hammered the rod out after removing most of the Cerro Safe.

                            Found the case neck on the floor.

                            Now all I have to do is clean up some of he errant Cerro Safe
                            "A man with a tractor and a chain saw has no excuses, nor does he need any"
                            Me. "Consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds" Emerson "Consistency is the darling of those that stack wood or cast bullets" Me.

                            Comment

                            • butlersrangers
                              Senior Member
                              • May 2012
                              • 533

                              #15
                              Mark - You should post the 'outcome' on the KCA site. Several people responded to your post there with different ideas and were never acknowledged.

                              Any theory on what contributed to the 'neck separation'? A photo of the case parts would be interesting.

                              Comment

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