Fellow shooters,
I have a semi-custom Ruger 10/22 that has recently given me problems.
The rifle has a stock receiver with Ruger internals (bolt, spring etc), KIDD 2 stage trigger and an Adams and Bennett barrel.
Prior to blowing these two cases I have shot nearly a thousand rounds through the rifle without having such a failure. I have however experience failures to return to battery with several magazines and ammunitions. None have caused anything like this and certainly not 30 rounds apart...
This is the first and second time I have experienced chamber detonation – same rifle, same ammo. The first time it wasn’t too bad. The round blew, the bolt held open. There was some smoke but the bullet cleared the barrel. After speaking with the range officer and finding the blown case I decided I had enough for one day so I went home and cleaned the rifle (I wouldn’t say it was the best cleaning I have ever given a rifle but it was thorough).
I examined the case as well. To me it appeared that the round wasn’t fully chambered and it blew just ahead of the rim. After discussing it with a friend I chalked the failure up to a dirty chamber and failure to seat. (i.e I figured the round didn’t seat properly because the chamber was dirty)
Two weeks later I head back to the range with a ‘clean’ rifle.
Approximately 30 rounds later i experienced a second chamber detonation. This one was much more violent than the first. In fact, three pieces of brass planted themselves into my shirt at the forearm and elbow.
Thank god for flannel and that im a righty. It was nasty.
This time the bullet lodged in the barrel. I saved the brass, bullet and shrapnel for further examination.
Again the round appears to have blown just ahead of the rim.
I’m hoping to gain some insight from you guys as to what the problem may be. The ammunition used was <span style="text-decoration: underline">Federal AutoMatch</span>. Same case. Its what the gun loves. I have several hundred rounds of it down the tube without such a failure (although I do get occasional FTF/FTRTB). Please point me in the right direction before I have to hand it to a smith for a bill an hour.
Thanks,
Lafayette
I have a semi-custom Ruger 10/22 that has recently given me problems.
The rifle has a stock receiver with Ruger internals (bolt, spring etc), KIDD 2 stage trigger and an Adams and Bennett barrel.
Prior to blowing these two cases I have shot nearly a thousand rounds through the rifle without having such a failure. I have however experience failures to return to battery with several magazines and ammunitions. None have caused anything like this and certainly not 30 rounds apart...
This is the first and second time I have experienced chamber detonation – same rifle, same ammo. The first time it wasn’t too bad. The round blew, the bolt held open. There was some smoke but the bullet cleared the barrel. After speaking with the range officer and finding the blown case I decided I had enough for one day so I went home and cleaned the rifle (I wouldn’t say it was the best cleaning I have ever given a rifle but it was thorough).
I examined the case as well. To me it appeared that the round wasn’t fully chambered and it blew just ahead of the rim. After discussing it with a friend I chalked the failure up to a dirty chamber and failure to seat. (i.e I figured the round didn’t seat properly because the chamber was dirty)
Two weeks later I head back to the range with a ‘clean’ rifle.
Approximately 30 rounds later i experienced a second chamber detonation. This one was much more violent than the first. In fact, three pieces of brass planted themselves into my shirt at the forearm and elbow.
Thank god for flannel and that im a righty. It was nasty.
This time the bullet lodged in the barrel. I saved the brass, bullet and shrapnel for further examination.
Again the round appears to have blown just ahead of the rim.
I’m hoping to gain some insight from you guys as to what the problem may be. The ammunition used was <span style="text-decoration: underline">Federal AutoMatch</span>. Same case. Its what the gun loves. I have several hundred rounds of it down the tube without such a failure (although I do get occasional FTF/FTRTB). Please point me in the right direction before I have to hand it to a smith for a bill an hour.
Thanks,
Lafayette