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Hatsan Escort Barrel Stuck!


CaptC
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Just acquired an older Hatsan (yes I know, had one before) from a deceased estate. The gun has been standing for a long time and the oily crudd in the workings took a bit of cleaning but half a can of WD 40 seems to have shifted 99%. My problem is with the barrel - it will not release from the breech. There is movement around the gas ring and at the breech but the barrel will not pull out? Help please!

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Excellent responses - thank you! I have liberally soaked it in WD40 with little sign of budging. I will give another seeing to before bed and if nothing shifts tomorrow morning it's brake cleaner time! I have tried releasing the bolt against the chamber - zilch!

Strangely, all the oily crud has gone but I fear that there is more unseen behind the receiver. 

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12 minutes ago, TIGHTCHOKE said:

Be careful the Brake Cleaner doesn't bite in to the blueing!

 

12 minutes ago, TIGHTCHOKE said:

Be careful the Brake Cleaner doesn't bite in to the blueing!

Thanks! I have a bottle of pure industrial alcohol here so might splash some of that around. 

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1 minute ago, Rob85 said:

Any way you could get something attatched to the barrel and use a slide hammer to shock it out with a few pulls?

I've been toying with the idea of getting a hatsan to see how I get on with a semi auto myself 

A good idea in principal but nigh impossible to get a slide hammer on it. Keep your eye on Gunwatch because it will be for sale when fixed!

3 minutes ago, Raw and wriggley said:

Save that for next years slow gin

Lethal! 

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33 minutes ago, CaptC said:

A good idea in principal but nigh impossible to get a slide hammer on it. Keep your eye on Gunwatch because it will be for sale when fixed!

 

If you had a fired shell, knock the primer out and push a thin piece of threaded rod down the barrel and through the primer hole of the chambered empty shell, secure it with a nut and you might get lucky. I'll grant it is a bit of an expense and faff to do but might just work. Another thing I would try is to put the barrel and receiver into boiling water to see if some expansion and contraction would help. Would love to take it off your hands but reckon the distance would put up a barrier getting it to northern ireland!

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2 minutes ago, Rob85 said:

If you had a fired shell, knock the primer out and push a thin piece of threaded rod down the barrel and through the primer hole of the chambered empty shell, secure it with a nut and you might get lucky. I'll grant it is a bit of an expense and faff to do but might just work. Another thing I would try is to put the barrel and receiver into boiling water to see if some expansion and contraction would help. Would love to take it off your hands but reckon the distance would put up a barrier getting it to northern ireland!

Two very good ideas - thank you. I thought of heating the receiver gently with a blow lamp but knowing my handy work something would go wrong. Will try boiling water poured into the breech. 

Yes, N Ireland is a long way away!

Again thank you.

2 minutes ago, snow white said:

Warm breech block with heat gun or hair dryer or boiling water anything just to get it just to swell a bit 

Tomorrows project! Cannot do any harm!

Cheers

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 I had a similar problem with a semi auto that I purchased a while back that had been put away wet. First I used a penetrating oil on the mag tube and also the barrel to receiver join and left it standing vertical for a week adding more oil as needed. I still had a stuck barrel but felt that the oil had certainly penetrated sufficiently. Using a nylon drift on the barrel ring/gas vent, a couple of sharp taps got a millimetre or two of movement. More oil could now get in and the next day one tap was all that was needed to free the barrel.

There was serious rusting, but thankfully only surface (although a bit of pitting) and where the barrel extension contacted the alloy receiver there was some serious crud and the steel had stuck to the alloy rather like alloy wheels on steel hubs. It needed a serious clean but was fully functional afterwards with the addition of a new gas ring. Just take your time and all will be well good luck 

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6 minutes ago, impala59 said:

 I had a similar problem with a semi auto that I purchased a while back that had been put away wet. First I used a penetrating oil on the mag tube and also the barrel to receiver join and left it standing vertical for a week adding more oil as needed. I still had a stuck barrel but felt that the oil had certainly penetrated sufficiently. Using a nylon drift on the barrel ring/gas vent, a couple of sharp taps got a millimetre or two of movement. More oil could now get in and the next day one tap was all that was needed to free the barrel.

There was serious rusting, but thankfully only surface (although a bit of pitting) and where the barrel extension contacted the alloy receiver there was some serious crud and the steel had stuck to the alloy rather like alloy wheels on steel hubs. It needed a serious clean but was fully functional afterwards with the addition of a new gas ring. Just take your time and all will be well good luck 

Good morning, Thank you for your advice - My gun is exactly as you describe - stuck solid in and around the piston and possibly around the receiver joint. Half a tin of WD40 has worked its way through and a lot of crud is coming out. Some "gentle" taps with a rubber mallet got a millimeter of movement so yet more WD. I tend to rush at things a bit as patience is lacking but slowly slowly catchee monkey!

5 minutes ago, TIGHTCHOKE said:

Dissimilar Metal Corrosion!

Don't think so, the high quality best Turkish tin has no rust at all. I think the gun was, as impala59 correctly says, put away uncleaned and wet. I'm off to the shed for the sledge -------

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2 hours ago, TIGHTCHOKE said:

Dissimilar Metal Corrosion!

I knew it had a name! When I changed the tyres on my SUV last year the fitters were hitting my old tyres with a sledgehammer to get the wheels off, they said it happens all the time! They put Vaseline on the hubs when refitting!

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Well, the barrel came off with the piston attached. Gentle (?) tapping with a rubber mallet and off it came. The O ring had disintegrated and stuck hard. Took a lot of effort to clean it off.

Just sent off for new O rings!

Thanks to everyone who contributed - A splendid PW effort!

The only downside was the constant nagging from the Memsahib as the oily juices spread along the kitchen floor. Better go and make an effort to clean it up  as the dear lady wanted "some fresh air" for some reason?

6 minutes ago, GingerCat said:

Quick wipe with an oily rag when putting away does wonders. 

Pity I cannot tell the previous owner as he is in "The Great Big Shooting Ground in the Sky!" GT 85 seems to work well!

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57 minutes ago, impala59 said:

I knew it had a name! When I changed the tyres on my SUV last year the fitters were hitting my old tyres with a sledgehammer to get the wheels off, they said it happens all the time! They put Vaseline on the hubs when refitting!

Copper crest is a better long term solution.

 

I am glad the captain has released his parts, I thought it would be the gas parts.

His poor wife, leaving after he spilt his oily juices all over the kitchen floor!

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5 minutes ago, TIGHTCHOKE said:

Copper crest is a better long term solution.

 

I am glad the captain has released his parts, I thought it would be the gas parts.

His poor wife, leaving after he spilt his oily juices all over the kitchen floor!

Good job I wear Gortex lined underpants!

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