Jump to content
Brian Enos's Forums... Maku mozo!

buddy_fuentes

Classifieds
  • Posts

    682
  • Joined

  • Last visited

About buddy_fuentes

  • Birthday 03/06/1946

Contact Methods

  • Website URL
    http://

Profile Information

  • Gender
    Male
  • Location
    Maurepas, LA
  • Interests
    Auto Pistols in 9mm. 9x23, .38 Super, .40 S&W, and .45 ACP.<br /><br />
  • Real Name
    Buddy Fuentes

Recent Profile Visitors

875 profile views

buddy_fuentes's Achievements

Looks for Match

Looks for Match (2/11)

  1. Yes it is ridiculous for these magazines to be so horrible. You can buy plastic magazines for other pistols at a much cheaper price and they run from the beginning. Maybe STI could take lessons on building mags or make serious changes. My 2011 is a pump action or a single shot at this point. I know I can buy new tuned mags for $135 each or more, but I really cannot afford that. I would just like to have these reworked. Thanks
  2. I'm a police officer for the Department of Agriculture and Forestry and have been carrying a Glock 19 due to the problems I am having with my (130mm) magazines for my Commander length STI 9mm. One of the magazines works most of the time and two give me grief all of the time. The pistol is not the culprit because it runs fine with two or three 140 mm magazines that I've tried. Most of the problems seem to be cause by the follower sticking. I bought new followers and springs.....it didn't help. Any ideas of who can repair, tune, or do whatever is necessary to make these magazines reliable enough to bet your life on? I've shot 1911"s & 2011"s most of my life and prefer them to other pistols. Thank You
  3. I have a commander length STI 9mm that is my carry gun. For some unknown reason the follower frequently hangs up half way while shooting. That happens on the flush magazines and not on the 140mm magazines. Of course I cannot carry the pistol without utter reliability. Can any of you help? Is there a kit or someone that has a mandrel to fix the problems? Thanks!
  4. Well I bought the spring kit and also bought the new striker. I took the gun to the range and the same ole business, MISFIRES! I was ticked off until I put some of the reloads in two of my Glocks and they did the same. The Glocks have the 3.5 trigger connector and they would not set off the primers either. I then pulled out my STI and my Kimber 9 mm's and they shot everything with no problem. The Kimber has a 2.5 pound trigger and the STI is 3.5. I have a good many primer that I keep on hand for reloading. I ran across some Sellier & Bellot primers at a reasonable price a while back and picked up 5K, I loaded some for my Limited gun and they worked fine. I try to save my Winchester primers for matches so I have been using the S&B primers for practice. I had not tried them in a striker fired pistol so I had no idea that they were as hard as the are. The M&P and the Glocks work fine with Wolf, Winchester, Remington, and any factory rounds I have tried. So the problem all along is a hard primer...glad it pushed me to rework my M&P because it has an even better trigger than it did before.
  5. LOL, you must be buying different ammo boxes than me. Just kidding, but I have had a few break. If you happen to run across one of those videos please pm me the link. I did a search and didn't find anything. b
  6. I don't consider 2" at 25 yards accurate either, but, in my experience, it doesn't usually get much better with any of the "plastic" guns. My guess is that when firing, they flex just enough to change the way the barrel is locked in to the slide, before the bullet exits. Do you really feel that the pistols, such as the Glock, flex? I've heard this before and feel if they really did flex, even a small amount, that a crack would occur in the frame eventually. I've seen several with well over a 150K rounds through them and have heard of one with over a 1/4 of a million rounds through it. Seems they would have cracked. Have you seen some high speed photography or something else to show this? If you have and know where I could view it, I would appreciate the link. Sorry for high-jacking the thread, but I've heard this before and really was curious of the answer. b
  7. "Well, I never really had a habit of saving targets." Yeah, if you are going to save a target this would be the one to save, that is sweet! Was that hand held off a bench, Ransom, or free hand? At any rate that is an awesome group. I've seen PPC shooters that shoot some fine off-hand groups at 50 yards, but they are truly few and far between. I have a factory test target where one of my pistols shot a .63 or .68, can't remember, and the pistol is very accurate. I can't duplicate the group even with the same loads, but I'm sure happy with that gun.
  8. Over the years I've had a good many custom guns built and paid a pretty penny each time. I have and do own Baer's, Clark, Ngai, Wilson, EWG, Dawson, and a few others built by gunsmiths that are not well known. All shoot extremely well and are reliable on top of that. When have the gun built or ordering I never thought about the price of one option over the other. If a barrel was purchased for a custom and I wanted a particular brand, I bought it. In the grand scheme of things, it doesn't make any difference if I spend $150 or $250 on a barrel if it makes me feel that it is a better product than the other. My last build was close to $2000 and I used a KKM barrel, less than $150, because a friend had a commander built with one and it shot like a laser. Most of us cannot shoot to the potential of our firearms in practical use. Off a bench if your eyes can see the sights and the target the same way each time, you can shoot some pretty good groups, but the ole Ransom Rest is the best way I have found. I own a Ransom Rest and have tested many pistols and revolvers through the years. Most won't shoot anywhere near 1" at 25 yards unless you find the prefect load and all of the stars in the universe are aligned with Mars and Pluto. So what I'm saying is it is your money and your gun, buy what makes you feel better and enjoy it. It may or may not meet your expectations, but you won't be sitting back saying I sure wish I had bought that xyz barrel instead of the cheap one. Best of luck to you.
  9. Thanks! I called and they were closed, but I'll call tomorrow and make an order. I appreciate everyone's help in getting me back in action. b
  10. I took it out and cleaned the striker and the channel a little while ago and it is black. It does show some wear on the striker tip and the shoulder. I went to a couple of sights and they were out of stock. One site was Mid-Way and I don't remember the other. Any ideas on locating one? Thanks, b
  11. No it isn't high primers, that is the first thing I checked. Then I had a Kimber 1911 9mm with me and was alternating one round from into each gun from the box and the Kimber would shoot and the M&P wouldn't. I'll pull the striker out and clean the channel as suggested. I ordered an Apex spring kit a few minutes ago and between the cleaning and the springs...hopefully it will do the trick. Thanks, b
  12. Fitting the barrel is one of the main things you can do to improve accuracy in any auto pistol. I have seen 1911's with a loose slide shoot extremely well. I've had knowledgeable gunsmiths tell me that a tight slide to frame fit would give you about 5% better accuracy. So, personally I think that a fitted barrel would be the logical step if you are trying to gain the best accuracy available for a particular pistol. It may not shoot like a s PPC gun, but it would help wring out the accuracy potential of you pistol. I'm sure you could send it to XYZ gunsmiths and get even more accuracy. I saw a video yesterday on You Tube of Jerry Miculek shooting an M&P CORE, with optical sights. He stated that they had gone to a 1 in 10 twist barrel for accuracy. Maybe this is something to look into. By the way, my 5" M&P Pro 9 mm shoots two and a half to three inch groups off the bench with almost anything. If I had inserts for my Ransom Rest, I bet test would prove it to be a 2" gun or less.
  13. I have an M&P (about three years old) that has been flawless for about 10 K or more rounds. While shooting at the range today it started having light firing pin strikes. Anybody have any ideas, I really don't think that a firing pin spring would loose all of it's tension at one time? The trigger pull feels the same and the pistol has not had any modifications. Just an out of the box Production Division pistol. Thanks,
  14. When adjusting sights think of FORS Front sight opposite...Rear sight same. Crank your rear sight to the level that you want. Shoot a few groups to see where the impact is located, then measure your front sight and go up or down from there. Even if you buy a sight that is a little off the rear sight adjustment should have you covered. If your pistol is hitting where you want it with the factory front sight, why would you want to change the height?
×
×
  • Create New...