Needs to be examined by a gunsmith
Remove the bolt and clean the chamber area thoroughly with a .22 caliber bronze brush and solvent. If .22 short cartridges have been fired in this rifle there could be a carbon ring buildup in the chamber where the mouth of the .22 short cartridge is. When a long rifle cartridge is then fired, the longer cartridge case will expand into this carbon ring tightly. Try cleaning the chamber before visiting a gunsmith.
When you shoot a bullet the bullet casing pos out through the ejector and that is where the bullet is and gunpowder to fire it.
The same as it is before it's fired - a casing. Some refer to an empty casing as a "shell" or "shell casing".
Do you mean a cartridge casing or the actual bullet?? One used in combat or just a WW2 era casing??
there is the primer, the rim, the casing and the projectile there is the primer, the rim, the casing and the projectile there is the primer, the rim, the casing and the projectile
there is the primer, the rim, the casing and the projectile there is the primer, the rim, the casing and the projectile there is the primer, the rim, the casing and the projectile
Grab and pull/twist or use a kinetic bullet puller.
I presume you mean for a bullet? The casing allows the bullet to grip the internal rifling of the barrel without shearing the soft lead of the bullet. The tip helps the bullet expand upon impact allowing all the energy of the moving bullet to be passed on to the thing you have pointed the gun at.
The (shell) casing or the cartridge carries the actual bullet projectile.
Musket: only had one shot before you had to reload again very slow reload (about 30 seconds) wooden had no bullet casing Assault Rifle: has a magazine capacity of usually 30 before you have to reload fast reload because it uses a magazine made of many different materials has bullet casing
During the loading or reloading process after the projectile is fitted to the casing the casing area that is holding the bullet ( the neck) is mechanically squeezed to provide a tight seal around the lead projectile.
I believe the smallest bullet in terms of diameter is the .17 HMR. It is a .22 casing that is necked down to accept a .17 caliber bullet.
A cartridge has 4 parts, the bullet, the casing, the primer, and the powder charge.