Bulged barrel of my SIG Hämmerli P 240

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astigmat2000
Posts: 37
Joined: Thu Mar 16, 2017 8:41 am
Location: Brittany/France

Bulged barrel of my SIG Hämmerli P 240

Post by astigmat2000 »

Hello to all,
I introduce myself. Im French and I live in Brittany next to the Atlantic, the westerner part of continental France. I'm 62 and retired from a great French military industry company. I've been shooting for 30 years now.
A couple of months back, I purchased a second hand SIG Hämmerli P 240 in .38 WC. Last Tuesday, once back home after a shooting session in my club while I dismantled my pistol to clean it, I noted a bulge in the barrel.
That gun was discontinued in 1977. I'd be happy to manage to fix it but I cannot find any spare here in Europe. Therefore I'm knocking all the doors I can find to try to find a solution.
I still can use the gun because I've also got the .32 SWL conversion...
Any advice, help would be highly appreciated.
Many thanks. You'll find a picture of my artwork as well.
Greetings from France.
Jacques
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My artwork
My artwork
hundert
Posts: 252
Joined: Mon Dec 28, 2015 4:40 pm

Re: Bulged barrel of my SIG Hämmerli P 240

Post by hundert »

I heard this happens when a bullet gets stuck in the barrel and then you fire another one. This (I heard) happens often to people who load their own ammo and don't load with enough gun powder (by mistake). Another would be using .357 in a .38 gun, I'm not sure it's physically possible though since I've never owned either calibers.
jenrick
Posts: 158
Joined: Fri Sep 25, 2009 2:16 am
Location: Central Texas

Re: Bulged barrel of my SIG Hämmerli P 240

Post by jenrick »

First verify the barrel is clear of any obstruction. Next verify that the pistol will function properly with the bulge (it appears far enough back that it should cycle), check this by cycling by hand. Once those two questions are answered, test fire it and see how it shoots. A bulge in the barrel can cause poor accuracy as a bullet can upset in the bulged part, and actually end up traveling down the rest of the barrel cocked. However it frequently has no effect on accuracy. There have been reports of it actually improving accuracy, though it is certainly not recommended to try and bugle a barrel to test it. You may find you have no need for a new barrel.

Whatever you do, do NOT shoot a .357 magnum round in a pistol chambered in .38 (regardless of whether it's a .38 S&W, Special, Super, etc). No matter if it will fit (it shouldn't), the chamber isn't designed for the pressure. It is possible to reload a .357 magnum cartridge to a pressure that would be safe in a .38 chamber, but there'd be no reason to do that as you could just use a .38 casing.

-Jenrick
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bdutton
Posts: 431
Joined: Mon Mar 01, 2004 9:56 am
Location: New Hampshire, USA

Re: Bulged barrel of my SIG Hämmerli P 240

Post by bdutton »

jenrick wrote:First verify the barrel is clear of any obstruction. Next verify that the pistol will function properly with the bulge (it appears far enough back that it should cycle), check this by cycling by hand. Once those two questions are answered, test fire it and see how it shoots. A bulge in the barrel can cause poor accuracy as a bullet can upset in the bulged part, and actually end up traveling down the rest of the barrel cocked. However it frequently has no effect on accuracy. There have been reports of it actually improving accuracy, though it is certainly not recommended to try and bugle a barrel to test it. You may find you have no need for a new barrel.

Whatever you do, do NOT shoot a .357 magnum round in a pistol chambered in .38 (regardless of whether it's a .38 S&W, Special, Super, etc). No matter if it will fit (it shouldn't), the chamber isn't designed for the pressure. It is possible to reload a .357 magnum cartridge to a pressure that would be safe in a .38 chamber, but there'd be no reason to do that as you could just use a .38 casing.

-Jenrick
Just to add to this.... I would also think that the bulge would allow gasses to escape more rapidly and result in a dramatic drop in velocity. Best bet is to find a replacement barrel or a really good machinist that can duplicate the original.
jenrick
Posts: 158
Joined: Fri Sep 25, 2009 2:16 am
Location: Central Texas

Re: Bulged barrel of my SIG Hämmerli P 240

Post by jenrick »

You'd have to have a bugle long enough for the base of the bullet to be in the bugle at the same time the nose is too loose much pressure. It's possible, but not likely.

-Jenrick
Ricardo
Posts: 254
Joined: Fri Oct 09, 2009 6:13 pm
Location: Dallas, Texas

Re: Bulged barrel of my SIG Hämmerli P 240

Post by Ricardo »

Those cracks look scary.
UtahDave
Posts: 32
Joined: Sat Jul 30, 2011 8:27 pm
Location: Utah

Re: Bulged barrel of my SIG Hämmerli P 240

Post by UtahDave »

Sorry about the bulged barrel. There was a thread about this http://www.targettalk.org/viewtopic.php?t=20920. .. Maybe some of these folks can help.

Cheers

Dave
astigmat2000
Posts: 37
Joined: Thu Mar 16, 2017 8:41 am
Location: Brittany/France

Re: Bulged barrel of my SIG Hämmerli P 240

Post by astigmat2000 »

Hello to all,
I reload almost everything I shoot but the .22s.
In France, the number of ammo you can buy is limited to 1000 rds/year/gun. Therefore, we all reload.
For accuracy, I only used H&N bullets made in Germany,hollow base and dia .355 (the barrel is tight and 9mm size), primers are Winchester, cases Starline and powder French made BA10 for a quantity of 0.16 grams that is 2.47 grains. Everything is the same I have done for 30 years now.
https://www.hn-sport.de/fr/reloading/wc-hb-357-148-gr-l same as these but in .355
I was shooting speed 3/7 sec when I bulged the barrel and you have no time to check whether the bullet is in the target....
Many thanks and have good day.
Greetings from Brittany.
Jacques
gn303
Posts: 244
Joined: Sat Oct 06, 2007 4:09 am
Location: Belgium

Re: Bulged barrel of my SIG Hämmerli P 240

Post by gn303 »

Hello Jacques,

I have been shooting the 240 for quite a while. The myth of a barrel too tight for the regular .38 size bullet has been around for a long time. Hammerlï has warned about bullets that were 'oversized' but all ways stated that it was not the cause of a bulged barrel.
What can happen is a cracked shell and part of the shell gets stuck in the barrel causing a pressure build up and a bulged barrel.

Maybe you can contact Walther. Walther has taken over all equipment from Hammerlï. Maybe they can help you.
Good luck.

Guy
User avatar
j-team
Posts: 1381
Joined: Mon Mar 28, 2005 2:48 am
Location: New Zealand

Re: Bulged barrel of my SIG Hämmerli P 240

Post by j-team »

gn303 wrote: Maybe you can contact Walther. Walther has taken over all equipment from Hammerlï. Maybe they can help you.
Good luck.

Guy
Hahahahaha... Good luck with that, Walther might own the hammerli brand, but they don't give a sh*t about anything hammerli that was made (properly) in Switzerland!
fc60
Posts: 750
Joined: Fri Nov 25, 2005 11:46 am
Location: Western Washington State, USA 98385

Re: Bulged barrel of my SIG Hämmerli P 240

Post by fc60 »

Greetings,

I did contact Walther to repair my Haemmerli 280 and SP-20.

With both issues they took good care of me.

Perhaps it was due to parts in stock from the assimilation of Haemmerli Switzerland.

Cheers,

Dave
gn303
Posts: 244
Joined: Sat Oct 06, 2007 4:09 am
Location: Belgium

Re: Bulged barrel of my SIG Hämmerli P 240

Post by gn303 »

j-team wrote:
gn303 wrote: Maybe you can contact Walther. Walther has taken over all equipment from Hammerlï. Maybe they can help you.
Good luck.

Guy
Hahahahaha... Good luck with that, Walther might own the hammerli brand, but they don't give a sh*t about anything hammerli that was made (properly) in Switzerland!
You caught the meaning of 'Good Luck'. But see the reply of fc60: wonders do happen!
David M
Posts: 1687
Joined: Wed Mar 24, 2004 6:43 pm

Re: Bulged barrel of my SIG Hämmerli P 240

Post by David M »

The major cause of bulged P240 .38 barrels over the years has been leaving skirts from a HBWC behind in the barrel and the next round pops the barrel.
The barrel is tight (9mm /.355-.356).
The design with the reduced diameter is not forgiving at all, we found the best load was cast 148g wadcutters, sized .356 and cast in soft alloy.
Loaded with 2.6g Bullseye they shoot like a dream.
A barrel maker in Australia does make a P240 barrel (Ray Pulver), but I am not sure about export.
Dr. Jim
Posts: 266
Joined: Mon Aug 18, 2008 3:32 pm
Location: Airdrie, Alberta, Canada

Re: Bulged barrel of my SIG Hämmerli P 240

Post by Dr. Jim »

Good luck on getting Ray to respond! I've had a request in with him for over two years, and a colleague who lives in Sydney likewise needs a barrel and can't get a response from him. Basically given up.

Dr Jim
astigmat2000
Posts: 37
Joined: Thu Mar 16, 2017 8:41 am
Location: Brittany/France

Re: Bulged barrel of my SIG Hämmerli P 240

Post by astigmat2000 »

Hi friends,
I'm in contact with Lothar Walther Company making barrels. I've found one of their items that could be a start to recreate one but I think the price 's gonna be too important for one person. On top of that, the different authorisations might be very complicated as well, in case I want to import the barrel and machine it next door...
http://www.lothar-walther.de/160.php
fc60
Posts: 750
Joined: Fri Nov 25, 2005 11:46 am
Location: Western Washington State, USA 98385

Re: Bulged barrel of my SIG Hämmerli P 240

Post by fc60 »

Greetings,

Something to consider is the method used for rifling.

I use button broached barrels from Douglas. As received, they measure about 28 HRC.

For the P240 Project I am working on, I special ordered a 2" diameter blank to allow for the bottom lugs.

After heat treating to 40 HRC and machining away 75% of the material, the internal dimensions remained relative stable. My bore gauges measure to 0.0001" and end to end uniformity was consistent.

I did try a "hammer rifled" barrel for a different project and after removing the excess material, the internal dimensions were not uniform due to the internal stresses of rifling.

Contact Lothar-Walther and describe the project to an engineer prior to buying a blank.

I did buy a Lothar-Walther blank for experimenting and it worked rather well. The reason I changed to Douglas was that they are easily obtained in the USA and consistency from blank to blank is quite good.

Contact me for questions regarding how I fixtured the P240 barrel thus far. I am still 50% away from completion.

Cheers,

Dave
machinist mike
Posts: 80
Joined: Sat Oct 13, 2012 6:36 pm

Re: Bulged barrel of my SIG Hämmerli P 240

Post by machinist mike »

Just a thought on this. Would it be possible to remove the old barrel from the lug and then either drill and ream out the stub or EDM, either by carbon burning or wire, and then take a barrel blank, put an appropriate shoulder on it, and silver braze it in place? you could then ream a chamber in it and be just about finished. Or am I missing something here? Any comments?
Dr. Jim
Posts: 266
Joined: Mon Aug 18, 2008 3:32 pm
Location: Airdrie, Alberta, Canada

Re: Bulged barrel of my SIG Hämmerli P 240

Post by Dr. Jim »

That plan, machinist mike has always been my fall back. If Dave would make me a stub breach (hint, hint!) there is a respectable chunk of barrel to fit in. I've done similar jobs in the past and they've worked out well. But of course it would be best to do it in one piece since the breach wall on the P240 is really thin.

Eh well.
Christopher Miceli
Posts: 324
Joined: Sun Aug 21, 2016 6:11 am
Location: Haymarket, VA

Re: Bulged barrel of my SIG Hämmerli P 240

Post by Christopher Miceli »

fc60 wrote:Greetings,

Something to consider is the method used for rifling.

I use button broached barrels from Douglas. As received, they measure about 28 HRC.

For the P240 Project I am working on, I special ordered a 2" diameter blank to allow for the bottom lugs.

After heat treating to 40 HRC and machining away 75% of the material, the internal dimensions remained relative stable. My bore gauges measure to 0.0001" and end to end uniformity was consistent.

I did try a "hammer rifled" barrel for a different project and after removing the excess material, the internal dimensions were not uniform due to the internal stresses of rifling.

Contact Lothar-Walther and describe the project to an engineer prior to buying a blank.

I did buy a Lothar-Walther blank for experimenting and it worked rather well. The reason I changed to Douglas was that they are easily obtained in the USA and consistency from blank to blank is quite good.

Contact me for questions regarding how I fixtured the P240 barrel thus far. I am still 50% away from completion.

Cheers,

Dave

How about a Krieger barrel since they are not buttoned
astigmat2000
Posts: 37
Joined: Thu Mar 16, 2017 8:41 am
Location: Brittany/France

Re: Bulged barrel of my SIG Hämmerli P 240

Post by astigmat2000 »

Hello Friends,
I'm in more serious contact with Lothar Walther boss Gerd. I'm in the process of sending him my bulged barrel and slide. He is eager to check how it could be possible to remake barrels for the P240. He said at least 50 pieces are necessary to get an acceptable retailing price.
Have you got an idea of the potential number of barrels, the American market would absorb? And for Dr Jim the Canadian one ? If you have any contact with Australia and New Zealand, it could be a good idea to inform them...
Lothar Walther only delivers to import companies with all the necessary official weapon import authorisations. For your own country, you just have to select it from here http://www.lothar-walther.de/252.php
Now I'm waiting for the green light to send my barrel to Germany and receive a quotation of what Gerd Walther calls "a decent price" 'cause on top of machining, an official pressure test must be conducted as well.
Let's wait what can come up with all my efforts on the topic.
Friendly from France.
Jacques
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