Open Breech Firing
Posted: Tue Feb 22, 2011 12:16 am
A while back my 82 year old dad and I were shooting a Remington 597 .22 that I purchased used from an Air Force SGT in Pensacola a few months before I retired from the Navy. This was the first time firing the rifle and I had done a routine cleaning on it upon buying it. I did not take it down to bare bones and clean the action. I just used a few liberal sprays of Gun Scrubber in that area.
Basically what happened was my dad was shooting and he fired, the magazine fell out of the rifle and he started shaking his hand. He wasn’t hurt, just said that it “stung a bit”.
I took the rifle and upon inspection I learned that the fired case was stuck about 2/3 into the chamber. There was a visible split in the case right ahead of the rim.
I took the rifle apart and cleaned the action well and spent a good amount of effort on the chamber and bore. I found the action to be pretty dirty, but nothing like I would have expected to cause that type of problem.
My question is; has anyone had a similar experience or heard of one? I know that Remington had a recall of the 597 in .17HMR but cannot find anything about a problem with the .22 version.
Any input or suggestions are appreciated. Thanks.
Basically what happened was my dad was shooting and he fired, the magazine fell out of the rifle and he started shaking his hand. He wasn’t hurt, just said that it “stung a bit”.
I took the rifle and upon inspection I learned that the fired case was stuck about 2/3 into the chamber. There was a visible split in the case right ahead of the rim.
I took the rifle apart and cleaned the action well and spent a good amount of effort on the chamber and bore. I found the action to be pretty dirty, but nothing like I would have expected to cause that type of problem.
My question is; has anyone had a similar experience or heard of one? I know that Remington had a recall of the 597 in .17HMR but cannot find anything about a problem with the .22 version.
Any input or suggestions are appreciated. Thanks.