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Brian Enos's Forums... Maku mozo!

stick

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  1. I have several Gen 3 Glocks that I shoot. (17, 30, 26 & 34)  I've always just used my trigger finger and slightly changed my grip to release the mag.  I've never liked the extended mag release.   In the last couple of years,  I have found other platforms that are lefty friendly, but the way I drop the mags on Glocks will never change.

  2. Usually too much crimp will make the bullets keyhole.  Do you know what your crimp is? 

    Here's how to measure crimp.

    "With a caliper measure the thickness of the brass at the case mouth, multiply times two and add the bullet diameter. That's your zero. After running your rounds through the crimp die, measure the loaded round at the case mouth and the difference from your zero is your crimp".
     

  3. Are you shooting mixed brass?  If you want to gauge the groups, all variables need to be the same.  All the same brass, sized the same, with the same OAL, powder within .01gr and crimp the same.  Different brass will change the pressure of the load due to wall thickness and size of the brass and the crimp of the bullet.

    You also need to support the gun with sandbags to take out the human error. 

  4. The 550 is a viable option as others have already mentioned.  As for other stuff:

    1) Dies for the caliber you wish to reload.

    2) conversion kit unless you order the press for that caliber

    3) reloading book for acceptable loads

    4) calipers

    5) Tumbler to clean brass

    6) media for tumbler

    The obvious stuff:

    1) Brass

    2) heads

    3) primers

    4) powder

    Down the line:

    1) case feeder

     

    You can do the research on the best powders for your caliber and whether you'll load minor or major.

    I have the 650 and absolutely love it!

  5. On 3/28/2021 at 2:06 PM, zzt said:

    I honestly do not understand why so many PCC shooters go with these heavy mag extensions.  Some guns just cannot hold them.  The first round feeds and fires.  The second won't chamber because the weight and the recoil joggled the mag off the catch.  You have to smack it back in for it to work.  Even in a monster match I don't see a mag holding 51 or 57 rounds.  Why.

     

    A long USPSA course is 32 rounds.  An ETS 40 round mag runs right out of the box and is reloadable with 40 rounds in it.  They are inexpensive and if anything ever goes you just send it back to ETS and they send you a new one.  I have three of them just for monster falling steel matches.  Even on a 72 round stage I've only needed to reload once.  I love their 17 round mags too.  I download to ten for SCSA matches.  They are IMO much better than Glock mags.

    I agree.  I can't get the Glock mags to run for crap.  I've never had a problem with ETS mags.  I also don't understand the reasoning that guys need to carry 50+ rounds in a magazine?  Are you missing that much that you need 50?  Most stages are 20-30 rounds.

  6. Almost all of my 4 PCC"S now have mixed uppers and lowers.  It's a modular platform.  You can swap them or interchange them without issue most of the time.  The only issue I have is with one upper fitting really tight into the lower.  You need to tap out the pins with a punch.

  7. I had the same thing happen years ago at an IDPA match, except I had the lint jam the gun so bad , that I couldn't rack the slide.  Needless to say, I never put mags in my pocket anymore.  Who would think think that a little piece of material would totally jam a gun?

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