Rangr44,
Point well taken. I posted the same comment on another forum and received as similar response. See below.
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Mac, I have two Winchester Hi-Wall rifles with the ejector system; a 38-55 & a 45-70. I set the face of the stop square to the case rim and rarely have a case jump the track, so to speak. When shooting over sticks, it's easy to place the hand over the action and contain the case.
For those who don't like the ejector system, your answer turning it into an extractor only seems easy enough to implement.
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I'm mostly a BPCR guy, therefore my Browning's and Winchester's only have extractors, with the exception of one Browning .45-70 with an ejector. When shooting it, most of the time the case stop works, but some do bounce around and out of the action. If hunting or especially bench shooting, I end up having to retrieve them or find that I tend to step on a few. So I've disabled the ejector on that rifle.
By the way, the guy that asked me if the ejector could be disabled provided the following reason for the question: "I shoot mostly benchrest and am used to picking brass out of the chambers of my target rifles. I guess I just don’t like that “snap” at the final stage of extraction".
So if you fall into one of the above mentioned catagories the ejector is easy to disable.
Wayne