no, no, no, no, NO!I would wipe them with a rag soaked in WD40 let air dry and give them a try![]()
Nah better off getting a sledge hammer and BOOM give them a whackno, no, no, no, NO!
WD40 if it infiltrates in the slightest will kill the priming mixture....it is verboten anywhere near a reloading Bench.
I'd try them in something that's easy to extract, so duds or ones that don't want to chamber can be easily extracted.
Don't get too excited about them, they're not exactly rare, hard to get, or expensive...might have more excitement throwing them into the burn barrel.
That's a lot of work to save a .22lr round that can be replaced for a few cents.I used a drop of rem oil and a steel wool pad.
Residue is still on but it’s not sticky
Hopefully it’ll be okay
You guys would be amazed and disgusted if you knew the lengths I've gone through to save a $0.03 primer.For $1.70 worth of ammo? No.
The worst case is the shell doesn't exact and the next round doesn't get loaded. It's more the front and breach that will get you killed afaik. As long as the business end is fine you might be ok.Found some .22 ammo.
It was covered with duct tape and left a sticky residue..I cleaned them with a pad the best I could. No longer sticky but still has residue on it.
just wondering if it’s safe to shoot or are they no longer safe to use?
thanks!
Well I have done dumber things...Nah better off getting a sledge hammer and BOOM give them a whack![]()
We'll do anything to keep from registering and paying for the privilege the State grants at our expense to exercise a Right.Are we real talking about saving 34 rounds of 22lr?
Where'sWe'll do anything to keep from registering and paying for the privilege the State grants at our expense to exercise a Right.
My dad also grew up in the Depression. Taught me early on how to pull nails without splintering the wood and how to straighten themLike many of my age my Dad grew up in the Great Depression. He was a very frugal man and though he had a good job and provided a nice home for us he wouldn't spend a dime if there was a way around it. We had an old weather beaten shed out behind an equally weatherbeaten one car garage. He took the shed apart nail by nail, board by board, reconfigured and re-built it on the back of the garage, it was by my eye, probably about six at the time, an engineering masterpiece. My job among other things, was to straighten all the bent nails so they could be reused, even though at my age, I knew he could well afford to buy a bag of nails I marveled at the whole operation. That kind of thinking has followed me all my life, and without regret.
So I would take that bag os .22's and at my leisure clean them up, one or two or ten at a time whenever I felt like it, till they were again all shootable.
I know exactly what you mean Kev.
Robby
I have an old rolling block single shot lever 22 that has seen many a range round or forgotten green tarnished roundI find range .22LR and shoot it all the time. Just get a rag and clean it up. If it's bent or stepped on/case distortion, I just chuck it.
Obviously I wouldn't run it on my precision target guns, but my plinking guns, I have no problems/don't care.