This'll be a "short story made long"...
Recently I replaced the short barrel on my HL Sherman with a long barrel, a la Fury. For those who haven't done a replacement, it involves accessing the turret interior, unscrewing a bunch of screws to remove the rotation gear, the bottom of the turret, and maybe removing or loosening the airsoft mechanism, pulling the barrel off, putting in the new one, then reversing the disassembly procedure.
All went well until I fired the gun. No pellet! It had worked before. Was the pellet lodged in the gun? As luck would have it, I was using some biodegradable glow in the dark pellets. I got out my trusty high intensity LED flashlight and aimed it down the barrel for a few seconds. When I looked down the barrel, sure enough, way down there was a faint green glow!
Now, how to get it out. Go through the whole disassembly process again? Very tedious. Work smart, not hard, I always say. So, I took a piece of cardboard and used a hole puncher to make a hole - almost the same diameter as the bore! I took my dust buster type hand vacuum, put the cardboard up to the muzzle, put the vacuum on it and turned it on. My gosh, success! the pellet was pulled out. There were three more behind it, which I vacuumed and picked out.
Not done yet. Why did it get stuck in a new barrel? Most logical answer was dirt. Out came my .22LR cleaning kit with a swab. Sure enough, there was a bunch of dirt in it. Ran the swab down a couple of times, tried some pellets. Aside from a ricochet off my workbench, all was good.
What's the moral, use glow in the dark pellets? Actually, it's clean the bore BEFORE you install it.
Recently I replaced the short barrel on my HL Sherman with a long barrel, a la Fury. For those who haven't done a replacement, it involves accessing the turret interior, unscrewing a bunch of screws to remove the rotation gear, the bottom of the turret, and maybe removing or loosening the airsoft mechanism, pulling the barrel off, putting in the new one, then reversing the disassembly procedure.
All went well until I fired the gun. No pellet! It had worked before. Was the pellet lodged in the gun? As luck would have it, I was using some biodegradable glow in the dark pellets. I got out my trusty high intensity LED flashlight and aimed it down the barrel for a few seconds. When I looked down the barrel, sure enough, way down there was a faint green glow!
Now, how to get it out. Go through the whole disassembly process again? Very tedious. Work smart, not hard, I always say. So, I took a piece of cardboard and used a hole puncher to make a hole - almost the same diameter as the bore! I took my dust buster type hand vacuum, put the cardboard up to the muzzle, put the vacuum on it and turned it on. My gosh, success! the pellet was pulled out. There were three more behind it, which I vacuumed and picked out.
Not done yet. Why did it get stuck in a new barrel? Most logical answer was dirt. Out came my .22LR cleaning kit with a swab. Sure enough, there was a bunch of dirt in it. Ran the swab down a couple of times, tried some pellets. Aside from a ricochet off my workbench, all was good.
What's the moral, use glow in the dark pellets? Actually, it's clean the bore BEFORE you install it.
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