Removing bullets stuck in revolver barrel

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Hummer70

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A good friend brought me a Ruger Speed Six Revolver yesterday with bullets stuck in barrel. It belonged to another friend of his and he had owned it over 30 years and someone gave him some ammo and apparently one had a squib load or a polluted primer and there was a bullet stuck about 1/2" below muzzle and the last one was flush with back of barrel.

My friend had tried to get them out with brass rod that did not work so he called me and I thought about it while he was inbound and came up with another idea.

I took a piece of round stock, chucked it up in lathe and turned it down about 2 1/2 inches long to where it could be inserted into the muzzle. I left a little shoulder on it so it would stop when the shoulder contacted the muzzle. The idea was to make a drill guide that would keep the drill center of the bore as I drilled a hole in the bullets.

I cut it off leaving enough for the shoulder, faced it and inserted it in 3 jaw chuck and drilled a pilot hole and eventually drilled a hole with a # 7 drill all the way through it.

I placed the drill guide in the muzzle and the #7 drill in a battery powered drill and drilled through the first bullet.

Next I tapped the hole 1/4X20 tpi and put Ed's Red in bore.

Next I inserted 1 1/2" long 1/4X20 socket head screw into the hole and the head of the socket head in a vise and started pulling on it and it finally let go with a pop and came out.

Drilled the next bullet down and repeated the above and it came out.

Drilled the third bullet down and it was much tighter so we clamped barrel in vise padded with a thick piece of leather and tapped on the front of the revolver frame under the barrel with a plastic hammer and it came out.

By this time my #7 drill quit had reached the limit of its travel and the 1/4X20 Tap had as well.

I took the guide back to the lathe and opened the No 7 hole to 1/4" with a long drill I had just purchased at the flea market that morning with a broke off nose. I reground the point and it worked like a champ. That was a good stop, this lady was selling off stuff and she let me have six drill bits, (two extra long ones) and two Craftsman steel drill gages for $5.00. One of my better flea market finds.

Went back, clamped the barrel in the padded vise jaws and inserted guide in barrel and drilled through till the drill came out the cylinder end of the barrel. Then inserted a brass rod in barrel and tapped out the last THREE bullets. They were all jacketed HPs and all came out with jackets.

Finally I ran a patch down the barrel and it was perfect as it was protected by the drill guide I had turned for the job.

My buddy took all six bullets with him and the guide to show his friend what he had and how we did it.

If I had owned a extra long 1/4X20 tap and a extra long #7 drill bit and a piece of 1/4X20 all thread or screw five inches long I would have opted for that but fortunately the drill guide saved the day and his barrel. I have never seen a long 1/4X20 tap so I assume that is not to be.

I had seen revolvers with stuck bullets all my life but it was first one I was ever asked for help with.

In looking at the wall thickness of the drill guide with the 1/4" hole drilled through it that did not leave much wall thickness and I would not have wanted to open it further.

Total time to make guide and remove all six bullets was 90 minutes.
 
Good job!
Amazing the barrel was not damaged by the multiple bullets fired into it after the first squib. Or maybe they were all squibs?
 
Great job I have more or less the same equipment in my shop but not your patience. Those guys should not be gun owners to do something like that, not just once but many times.
 
I took my time and wanted to make sure everything was right as I did not want to score his barrel. One would think he would figure out something was wrong but obviously his mind was not on the game.

I brought four soldiers over for them to fire the M16A1E1 and would you believe three out of four put loaded mags in upside down ! ! ! J!
 
I had someone bring in a 4" 357 with only 1 stuck about halfway down (this person was smart enough not to keep trying). I filled the bore up with penetrant oil, let it sit for a couple of minutes, and tapped it out (yes, the wrong direction) very easily with a SKS cleaning rod. Then gave the whole gun a good cleaning, and told this person to throw away any remaining ammo from that source and not to obtain reloads from there again.
 
A USMC EOD friend told me about a Marine who had a high explosive squib round in a M203 and then fired another into it- 2 HE rounds stacked and mushed into each other in the tube. He evacuated the range, removed the tube from the weapon, and took it to a safe area to be BIP'd.
 
Yeah I bet all kinds of stupid stuff goes on in the military now that the flower children's offspring are grown and never been around firearms prior to joining up.

John Unertl (Unertl Optical - maker of the USMC Sniper scopes) told me he got them in all the time because the kids rammed a cleaning rod through the rear lens of their scopes. Go Figure.
 
I just got through with a similar project on a Uberti SAA 45 Colt. This one had 5 jhp's in the bore, the last one of which did not completely exit the cylinder. I cut it in two with a jewlers saw so I could remove the cylinder then pulled the barrel and started drilling. I made a brass drill guide to keep the 1/4" bit centered then used progressively larger bits until I could drive the bullets out. Ended up having to go to to .400 before the jackets would move. I will try the tap and pull next time, if there is a next time
 
Excellent and elegant solution to the problem. I believe that I would still use plug gauges, pin gauges, a lead slug, and/or Cerrosafe to verify that the bore has not been ringed or bulged.
 
I have no idea how some people can do it but it happens way too often. My record is eight 22 bullets in a six shot revolver barrel. They had to reload! The only reason they quit shooting was the cylinder would no longer turn.
On the 45 Colt, I checked the bore with a plug gauge and could detect a difference as I pushed it down the bore but the next .001" gauge would not start so the damage was minor.
 
My neighbor brought his Davis .380 (I know...Cheap junk) over to me and asked why the slide wouldn't pull back anymore.
Disassembled the pistol and discovered that the barrel had a round stuck in it and the second round he tried mushroomed the barrel out big time.
Told him he should go buy a lottery ticket because he was one lucky guy. Lucky he still had all his fingers and such.
Buy cheap you get cheap.
 
Next time I will have a 1/4X20 pully tap (6" long) and a No 7 long drill (6" long) and a 36" piece of 1/4X20 all thread rod.

I will drill the bullets (with drill guide in place) through all of them. Then tap all of them or maybe 1 at a time. Cut the 36" all thread in half, make a weight out of 1 1/4" round stock about four inches long, drill a 1/4" hole through it, place it on rod with a nut on back end and use the round stock as a floating hammer . Same procedure used on seal and bearing pullers with sliding weight that is cycled to the rear with force.
 
bbbbill said:
I believe that I would still use plug gauges, pin gauges, a lead slug, and/or Cerrosafe to verify that the bore has not been ringed or bulged.

Why?

He said he ran a patch down the barrel and it was "perfect".

If the owner is satisfied with how it shoots, why bother?
 
I was given to repair a new frontier model Colt Peacemaker in .22 RF that had it's barrel full of slugs. Numrich had a new Barrel for under $50 so I put a new barrel on it. The customer complained that it should not have taken a new barrel and that he had a buddy that could have gotten the slugs out on his lathe. I told him even if that was possible without damaging the barrel that the labor would have cost more that the new barrel.
 
Maybe the owners of said guns should only own single shot muzzle loaders. But on the other hand if they are that stupid maybe Darwin is a good thing. Clean out the gene pool a little. I just hate the idea of any innocent bystanders getting injured or killed in the process of it/
 
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