I went prairie dog hunting in Montana this weekend and was shooting Black Hill Remanufactured bullets in my new .223 Ultra. I went to eject the shell and only about ¼ of the shell came out. :eek: The rest of the brass was still in the chamber
basically blew up the casing. Me, being the rocket scientist that I am, decided to take a screw driver to it and see if I could bend over the remaining part of the casing and use a ram rod to tap out the remain brass. I did it as careful as I could with the tools that I had out in the field.
I got the rest of the cartridge out of the camber. I was elated thinking my new Ultra was back in business. The next time I shot the casing would not eject. I never had this problem prior to removing the blown up casing. I then had to use my ram rod to gently tap out the spent casing in order to remove them on the average of 8 out of 10 times. I examined the casing and could see little scratches in the brass caused by a nick I must have gouged in the chamber while trying to remove the casing. The brass wouldnt have any scratches in them prior to putting them in the chamber.
Now what to do? Any ideas how to smooth out the gouge in the chamber?
?
P.S. I WILL NEVER shoot Black Hills remanufactured bullets again! I learned a hard lesson.
P.S.S. This was our first PD hunt and we had a great time! Good thing I had the old Remington 788 .243 and NEF 17HMR Sporter.