I have a Remington 700 that I purchased second hand. It has a muzzle break on it that I’m not too fond of, I tried to get it off without any success. I tried a heat gun to warm it up and still no luck, any suggestions before I head to the gunsmith?
I have had the barrel up in a lathe, cut of the end of the barrel,. just behind the part You do not want to use. Make a new thread on the barrels foreend, You problem is solved for many years ahead.I have a Remington 700 that I purchased second hand. It has a muzzle break on it that I’m not too fond of, I tried to get it off without any success. I tried a heat gun to warm it up and still no luck, any suggestions before I head to the gunsmith?
Where's @sestoppelman at? He still must be asleep. He usually is the first one to pounce on the spelling of brake vs. break. LOLMuzzle brake.
Unless you have the proper tools, I think I would go to a gunsmith and see what he can do. I also would be careful applying heat.
Welded and pinned was my next question. If you can find the spot welds you can usually grind them down a hair, enough to where the pins will pop once you give the brake a spin. The pins are normally just fit in a dimple on the barrel and will push their way out once you start to unscrew. That said you will need to re chase/cut the threads.What @revturbo9967 asked. Are you sure it's threaded to the muzzle? Pinned-and-welded? If it's the latter, I don't think it's coming off without a fight and you'd be better off cutting-and-rethreading.
@CoElkHunter I would've done if Red Leg hadn't, lol. I was half expecting pictures of a FUBAR'd bore.