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Needs to be looked at by a gunsmith.
The clip does not have to be in for a Sears 103.228 bullet to extract. The clip or magazine is only required to load more ammunition into the chamber.
Plus one in the chamber means that in addition to however many cartridges are in the magazine, there is one more loaded in the gun.
IIRC, yes.
The bullet jammed in the gun's chamber. Come into my chamber and sit down.
When the firing pin strikes the cartridge primer, it ignites the gunpowder. The bullet is separated from the cartridge casing, and is pushed through the barrel by these expanding gasses which are a result of the gunpowder combustion. At one point in the barrel, there is a port which goes from the barrel to the gas piston. After the bullet passes this point, gases go into this port, driving back the piston, which is connected to the bolt carrier. As the bolt carrier is pushed back, it extracts the spent casing from the chamber, ejects it, and then, as it returns for a forward position, it catches the rim of the next round in the magazine, and pushes it into the chamber. Then the cycle is repeated.
The magazine.
No...you do not have to have clip in rifle for it to eject shell casing. You can use without clip and load one bullet at a time. Alot of rifle ranges want it done that way because there is less chance of bullet remaining in chamber..good luck
By opening the action
A chamber can be a room in a house, such as a bed chamber. It can also mean the part of a gun where a bullet lies, such as--> "He chambered a round into the gun."
k first off you need the magazine in one hand facing a way from you take the bullet and push down the spring and just put in your bullet ( how to put it in:) put the bullet stright up such as: http://www.eeel.nist.gov/oles/imagesbullet.jpg ,and then push down until you don't see the casing just the bullet and push front words and your bullet should be in your magazine!
In most circumstances, no. The bullet is too large to chamber in the handgun.