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OdinIII

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Posts posted by OdinIII

  1. There was definitely more fouling in the channel than I expected. I found only black powder and no hard pieces but it took 6 or 7 q-tips before they came out clean.

    The spring end was not at a split in the cups and I saw no evidence of the striker hitting the striker block. I do not have adjustable over travel so I guess that is good.

    I wish this was easier to test. I’m not sure I can make it to the range before the next match.

  2. Thanks to all for the tips. I was fully expecting the answer to be the primers so I haven’t pulled out the striker yet. Would it be obvious if fouling in the striker channel is the issue or will a tiny amount of crud cause issues? Keep in mind that I did clean it spotless with a q-tip and inspected with a light less than 1,000 rounds ago when I installed the spring. I’ve probably been spoiled by running stock Glocks and getting away with ignoring maintenance.

    The gun is box stock with lightened safety plunger spring, striker spring, recoil spring and guide rod. I followed an online tutorial and polished the trigger parts. I have no overtravel adjustment but did polish the plunger button. I’ll take it apart tonight and report back.

  3. 26 minutes ago, Beef15 said:

    CCIs are hard, Winchester will probably help.

    Are you gauging or plunk testing rounds? They can stop short of the end of the chamber and move forward when struck if the bullet contacts the lands or the case mouth diameter is too large.

    Trigger bar is also stock? 

     

    I haven't been plunk testing the rounds but the failed round I recovered from the range plunks fine in my barrel.  I'm assuming that eliminates out of battery issues due to the rounds.

     

    The trigger bar is stock.  I replaced the firing pin safety and striker spring and polished the internals like I've done my other pistols.

  4. 1 minute ago, B_RAD said:

    Seat them deep.  That should work. 

     

     

     

    I forgot to mention that I found one of the failed rounds and there was a slight crease from seating.  From my research that is a good thing.

  5. I'm running a 4.5 lb. striker spring with a factory striker and had 3 light strikes at a recent match.  I think the gun has about 700-1000 through it with the lighter spring.  I'm new to this game and want to nip this in the bud.  I really like the trigger now but I like a reliable pistol much more.

     

    What is the recommended frequency for striker spring replacement?  Also, I'm using CCI primers because I ran out of Winchesters.  Will Winchester primers fix this issue or is something else going on?  I can only find the Federal mag and match primers in stock.  Should I try these or just buy the easily available Winchesters? 

  6. Balakay’s data looks exactly like I would expect from the GM’s that I’ve seen shoot at local matches. There is no penalty for failures in the hero or zero scenario so they go for it. Unfortunately, it seems our new new standards are based off of “burn it down” runs.

  7. I would say 100% shouldn't be the best possible run, but should be what the very best shooters can reasonably  do on match day most of the time.



    Exactly right!

    If I understand correctly from previous post then the new hit factors are all hero or zero runs by the best shooters in the country. Surely this wasn’t the intent of our leadership?
  8. What problem was the update intended to fix?

     

    I don’t know.

     

    Sadly I think this is just another in a long line of decisions that are made with good intentions but poorly executed.

     

    I don’t understand the logic of using the very best scores. I thought the classification system should tell you where you rank among other shooters. To me this means what they can reasonably do consistently on a given stage, not how high they can score when the stars align with a “burn it down” hero or zero attitude. I would love to look through the data, maybe there isn’t as large a gap as I suspect between what I would call typical stage performance and classifier performance.

     

  9. Maybe I’m just a stickler for rules to be very clear with no opportunity for misinterpretation.

    I can’t see where the current rules say you can use a plastic or brass flush plug so if the ruling is null and void then how are we supposed to know that we can use a plug of any kind?

    I’m just trying to play by the rules.

  10. Please quote that rule. I just read the entire appendix and can’t find that.


    It’s a ruling by the NROI

    https://uspsa.org/nroi/rulings

    Look for appendix D4 #22

    Maybe it carries no weight now with the new rules, I honestly don’t know but it is still on the site. The way I understand the production rules are if it doesn’t say you can do it then you can’t.

    I wanted to do the same thing as mentioned above to add weight to my G34 but just couldn’t figure out a way that I could defend the slug if challenged.
  11. Not trying to argue but the ruling is clear. Plastic plugs weighing less than .5 ounces are allowed. Since anything not specifically allowed is illegal then anything not plastic and adding significant weight is illegal unless the ruling doesn’t apply after the rule changes. I’m sure you won’t get caught but I don’t see how the Seattle Plug can be legal under the current rules.

  12. The only right thing to do is use 10mm brass. Buy some once fired online or at a local range. Buy 1K and shoot minimum loads and you’ll be set for a very long time. You’ll need new 10mm brass for max loads.

  13. I know nothing of Open pistol optics but I did figure out a problem with a .22 rifle I had years ago. The scope had a 200 yard parallax adjustment and I couldn’t duplicate results from day to day. It would group but not in the same spot. I had about 3” of parallax at 40 yards IIRC.

    Is it possible that parallax is your problem?

  14. BS.  Switch guns and switch guns often I say!
     
    How you gonna know which one you like best if you don't switch to each one, then switch back and forth a dozen times in one year?!


    One thing is for sure with a new pistol is that you probably won’t have the same issues you had with the old one. You’ll have issues, but different ones.

    Listen to Memphis, the pistol is almost irrelevant for 99% of USPSA shooters. You can do very well with whatever you have.
  15. It may sound crazy but I like the DA trigger for dry fire lol.


    You shouldn’t be practicing dry fire and using the DA for every pull. That will hurt your shooting. You only get a realistic pull for the first shot with both the Glock and Tanfo. You have to improvise for the rest.
  16. [emoji23] 2other Dillon’s not one issue but this one is cursed. Also I wouldn’t sell it to anyone with all the problems it has. Once in awhile I guess a lemon comes out and this is one. I love my Dillon’s just frustrating that nothing is working for this one. I hope they will switch it out this time cause fixes aren’t working. 


    Maybe they will replace it. You may be better off selling it unless they offer free return shipping this time.

    I wouldn’t worry about selling it with a full disclosure, someone will buy it. With it’s history, I’d be like you and want a completely fresh start.
  17. Just about anybody's adjustable sights are going to hang off the back of the gun horribly.  Remember, this is an MOS gun, so the rear dovetail is right on the back of the slide.

     

    Pay attention to this. I like Dawson adjustable rears but would not want it hanging off more than they do already on non-MOS models.

     

    It sounds like I would go fixed for an MOS and just use his warranty if needed to get the correct front sight height for your average load.

  18. Thanks for the replies. I’m interested only in a single stage press. My loading needs are a couple club matches per month and I’m shooting CO/production, so perhaps 500-600 rounds of 9mm/month.


    You’ll only be happy loading that volume on a single stage if you have gobs of spare time and nothing better to do. You need to be able to load faster and use the leftover time for dry fire practice.

    I’m in the same boat. Started loading precision rifle on a single stage. Bought a Lee turret and started shooting 2 USUSA production matches a month. I’ve already found out that even though I’m happy with the turret press and have no issue with it’s function, it takes way too much time to crank out the minimum of 400-500 rounds a month to compete.

    With that said, you can get by with a turret press and I probably won’t upgrade for a long time because I feel more likely to catch a quality issue with the turret since there is only one action happening at a time. Now that I’m loading range brass, there seems to be more issues to handle than before. YMMV but I just don’t think you’ll be happy loading in a single stage.
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