I have a Browning Gold hunter with a stuck choke, real stuck. Any one with ideas on how to remove. Yes it's been to a gunsmith and nah still stuck.
I have a Browning Gold hunter with a stuck choke, real stuck. Any one with ideas on how to remove. Yes it's been to a gunsmith and nah still stuck.
"ars longa, vita brevis"
Which gunsmith?? I had some stock work done by Dollimore a few years ago. He removed a stuck choke at the same time which another gunsmith couldn’t budge. He’s local to you so may be worth a nudge.
Was Rob. Great gun smith but this one a bit to stuck for even him. So don't fancy my chances of a removal unless there some miracle.
"ars longa, vita brevis"
Leave the choke end of the barrel in a container of oil / penetrating oil for a day or two and try again. Warm up the barrel with a few shots and try while hot. A few rapid heating / cooing cycles to break the grip on the threads.
There are only three types of people in this world. Those that can count, and those that can't!
Whys it stuck? leave it outside?
Boom, cough,cough,cough
Dose it in Kroil and leave it standing a while. Kroil is a wicking oil that creeps into microscopic tolerances.
Maybe do a rapid fire of 15 shots then try and unscrew it
If it is soo stuck, does it need to come out ? Would sooner leave it than mangle it.
I'm drawn to the mountains and the bush, it's where life is clear, where the world makes the most sense.
Penetrating oil, then heat the outside of the barrel and try again preferably with a sharp impact. If not sucessful try tightening it then back the normal, way that often loosens a siezed thread. Next time dont confuse the locktite with lithium grease (-:
Apply whatever product you use whilst the barrel end is warm
going to try PB Blaster as my penetrating oil, have heated up the end with a blow torch Tomorrow I will try and move it with a easy out.
"ars longa, vita brevis"
do not use an easy out , on a thin wall choke it will expand it outwards and do more damage. you can buy an aerosol can from engineering supplies that can freeze metal with its spray, i would heat the outside gently then spray inside the choke to shrink it after soaking in penetrating oil, then try undoing it.
GA you are missing the obvious! Vice, hacksaw, sorted. Ha ha ha ha
It takes 43 muscle's to frown and 17 to smile, but only 3 for proper trigger pull.
What more do we need? If we are above ground and breathing the rest is up to us!
Rule 1: Treat every firearm as loaded
Rule 2: Always point firearms in a safe direction
Rule 3: Load a firearm only when ready to fire
Rule 4: Identify your target beyond all doubt
Rule 5: Check your firing zone
Rule 6: Store firearms and ammunition safely
Rule 7: Avoid alcohol and drugs when handling firearms
@muzza my suggestion is similar to your last idea. worst case scenario is the last option I have to do when a bolt is broken in something and I have to heat, bash etc. it out. Get a dremel with a set of stones/carbides and slowly and gently cut a groove down the length of the choke until you can just barely see the top of the threads. Do his on both sides if you have too. As an added bonus you could then leave it soak for a little bit longer but I'd give it a crack at first trying to turn it and then with something pointy try to collapse the choke in on it self.
It can relieve the pressure on the threads which at a guess are probably rusted in
Bookmarks