Scratched the Chamber Shoulder

brianwy77

Member
Joined
Dec 10, 2008
Messages
24
Location
Casper, Wyoming
I had a cleaning mishap and scratched my rifles chamber shoulder. Have I ruined my cutom rifle? I had a steel rod break while pushing a jag through.

I looked into the chamber to check it out and found that I had put a small scratch on the chamber shoulder. It's not to big about the size of a hair.
but it's visable.

Can any one tell me what problems might I have caused by doing this.

Thanks
 
If a round will chamber normally, fire a round and examine the case. It will give you a good idea of how big or deep the scratch is.
 
Hope you learned your lesson here as well as everyone who reads this.

Cleaning a rifle without a bore guide is not smart.

Just knowing that I damaged a custom rifle of mine by not using a bore guide would make me ill plus my Smith would put me in Stocks and Flog Me Like an Oaf!!
 
Good advice by all.

There is no danger in shooting it so do so and look at the brass. It may not show any marks
at all.

J E CUSTOM
 
Last edited:
Shoot it.

A surface inclusion in the cartridge chamber area can generally create two types of headaches.

One is it marks up the brass and in the most extreme of cases, it could lead to reduced brass life because you now have a stress riser. I'm splitting hairs and being a bit philosophical here as I've never personally seen this happen. Be that as it may I'm fairly certain that if I take a file or scribe and mark a big deep ring on my brass someplace it's liable to split along that mark if I shoot enough.


Second is it will make extraction either impossible or difficult. this is usually limited to Rings being cut in the chamber during chambering due to poor chip evacuation.

In your case from what your describing I'm inclined to believe that the gun will be just fine if the "woops" is limited to a little nick in the shoulder. If it really bothers you, slather some 320 or 400 grit lapping compound onto a fire formed case and lap any raised nicks/dings/burrs out of the shoulder. Solder a rod into the primer pocket so that you have something to wrestle the case with.

Then wash the snot out of that gun afterwards and USE A BORE GUIDE ALWAYS from now on!!! Can't stress that enough.

More gun barrels are ruined by haphazard/too frequent cleaning sessions than by shooting. I don't clean gun barrels until I see a reduction in performance and it is just for this reason. Every time you stick something in your barrel you run the risk of damaging something. You CAN leave a bore fouled. The ol cardinal rule of a dirty gun is taboo stems from the days of corrosive priming compounds. Those haven't been used for over 60 years.

Good luck,

Chad

Chad Dixon
LongRifles, Inc.
 
How do you guys know he wasn't using a bore guide to begin with?

Doesn't a bore guide just keep the rod centered on the back side where the bolt goes in?

How could a bore guide have helped to prevent this?

Thanks,

iSnipe
 
On a properly made bore guide, the "nose" of the guide goes well into the chamber. The chances of having a broken rod hit the shoulder of the chamber are slim. I'll qulify that by saying on a short cartridge. If the cartridge is long, as in a 300 RUM or similar, it could easily happen. My advice, on cleaning procedure, varies greatly from another member's but I would suggest smaller jags or smaller patches.
 
On a properly made bore guide, the "nose" of the guide goes well into the chamber. The chances of having a broken rod hit the shoulder of the chamber are slim. I'll qulify that by saying on a short cartridge. If the cartridge is long, as in a 300 RUM or similar, it could easily happen. My advice, on cleaning procedure, varies greatly from another member's but I would suggest smaller jags or smaller patches.

Using a Lucas Bore Guide the chances are 0%, period, end of discussion... They will also prevent any of the cleaning materials from entering the chamber area, which means nothing flows back into the magazine area for example.

A good Bore Guide is the 1st step to cleaning a bolt action or any rifle that can be accessed with straight access into the chamber area. This is firearm maintenance 101 gentlemen.
 
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