44 magnum 629-6 Revolver jammed cylinder and hammer

Cylinder will not open

OK after some thought and some reading here on this site I hit the cylinder real hard with my hand and got the cylinder to open then I tightened the ejector rod so my question is should I send the 629 if it happens again or just keep an eye on the ejector rod to make sure she is tight ?
 
Doug--l have 8000+rounds thru my 629-6 Hunter.
Never a problem...lf you want to snug up your ejector
rod l suggest you first wrap it with leather to keep from
marring the surface...
Personally, l don't use Loctite on ANYTHING.. Not even
on the Leupold 4X EER that resides on the barrel of my
S&W 460 Mag PC Hunter...Still snug as ever after 3 years
 
Ejector rod fixed

Thank you sw282 after tightening it by hand I then put a piece of leather around it and used my small vice grip to tighten it some more to snug it up and now she seems fine.
 
Thank you sw282 after tightening it by hand I then put a piece of leather around it and used my small vice grip to tighten it some more to snug it up and now she seems fine.

Uh, that's a really good way to screw up your revolver. You should place at least 3 fired cartridges - 1 in every other charge hole in the cylinder to avoid breaking off the ejector splines. Personally, I use 1 fired cartridge in each charge hole of the cylinder. Vice grips can really screw up the knurling at the end of the ejector rod. A drill chuck from a drill press or hand drill can be used, or there is an excellent tool that is made for use on the extractor rod:

ViseSmith™ - a unique extractor rod tool for - S&W(R), Taurus(R), and Ruger(R) Speed Six Revolvers | Welcome to Gunsmither™ Tools | Myself

Good luck,

Dave
 
My new-in-box 629-6 is one of my nicest Smiths. Never a problem. Bought in 2012.
 
Note: grip the extractor rod next to the yoke to tighten, as pictured. Gripping the knurled end is a good way to bend the rod and center pin and gather in more problems!
 
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