stchman
Member
A while back I had purchased some Tula .357 Magnum ammo. The ammo loads and shoots fine.
When I shoot it in my Ruger or Taurus revolvers, the spent cases get almost stuck in the cylinder. I have to use a rubber mallet on the ejector rod to get the cases to eject.
Now, I never plan on buying that ammo again for my revolvers, but I would like to shoot up the ammo.
I have put oil on the cases before loading the ammo and ejection is a bit easier, but still pretty tough.
Without people telling me to "throw it away", "don't buy it ever again", "give it to me", etc., does anyone have any meaningful advice to shoot up the rest of the ammo. Should I steel wool the outside of the cases to smooth out that rough polymer coating?
Thanks.
When I shoot it in my Ruger or Taurus revolvers, the spent cases get almost stuck in the cylinder. I have to use a rubber mallet on the ejector rod to get the cases to eject.
Now, I never plan on buying that ammo again for my revolvers, but I would like to shoot up the ammo.
I have put oil on the cases before loading the ammo and ejection is a bit easier, but still pretty tough.
Without people telling me to "throw it away", "don't buy it ever again", "give it to me", etc., does anyone have any meaningful advice to shoot up the rest of the ammo. Should I steel wool the outside of the cases to smooth out that rough polymer coating?
Thanks.