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tomv

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Posts posted by tomv

  1. I was just on the Brazos website and noticed that they sell the same mount for RTS2 and Romeo 3 Max. Do these sights have the same bolt pattern or does the Brazos mount come with two sets of drilled and tapped holes?

  2. 1 hour ago, open17 said:

     Little concerned about pushing a coated/plated at 1400 through a barrel with 

    holes.

    X-treme bullets makes a heavy plated 9mm bullet which is good for Major power velocities. Watch their website because I've seen that stuff in and out of stock recently.

  3. I tried some of the Bayou 105s with good results. My 95 gr MG loads are around 61 PF and the 105s felt like they were in the same ballpark, but I never chronoed them. I am shooting a shrouded barrel so I would rather not use coated bullets but it may come down to that.

  4. Sorry, just read the caption of the thread. For a light Steel Challenge load with light bullets a faster powder would be better. I'm using N310 with all of my loads using bullets around 100 gr +-. The problem with light loads using slow powders is that they don't burn completely which leads to high velocity variations and causes them to be very dirty. Sometimes, grains of unburned powder interfere with the operation of the gun.

    To give you an idea of what you might try, I have a SC load for my open gun using 115gr bullets and 3.8 gr of N320. To get an equivalent power factor with 3N37, which has a burn rate close to what you listed, I had to bump the load up to 5.5 gr. Both were 109 PF. In this particular case the combination worked pretty well but I wouldn't expect the same results with 100 gr bullet.

  5. I have a cmmg 4.5" barrel with Taccom shroud. Cmmg bolt carrier group . Gun weighs 4.25# and runs 100%. I like it better than my Volqartsen Ultralight with Modshot chassis even though it's 3/4# heavier.

  6. I use N310 exclusively for PCC SC loads. My current load is 2.4 gr N310 under 95 gr Montana Gold JHP seated at 1.085". 61 PF in my Taccom 5.5" barrel.

     

    The high impulse of this very fast powder provides positive cycling and ejection with minimal dot movement. I've read that N310 is temp sensitive but have not noticed a difference in the way my gun runs in temperatures from about 50 to 95 degrees.

  7. I was using a PWA pre ban lower receiver with a Stern defense mag adapter, a JP bolt, JP SCS buffer and the old style Taccom shrouded barrel. The barrel is all that I've changed.

     

    The old configuration would feed the 115 gr MG JHP just fine but I that bullet has a relatively long, pointy tip and was seated to 1.135" COAL.

     

    The 95gr MG JHP, which wouldn't feed, has a short fat profile and needs to be seated to 1.085 to retain the bullet.  The shorter length also contributed to the feeding problem.

  8. It's not the lower feed ramp on the Taccom Superfeed barrel that's important. In fact, since I'm using Stern defense mag adapter, mine doesn't have a lower ramp, I'm using the one built into the Stern.

    The SF barrel has an upper feed ramp which prevents hollow point bullets, particularly ones shaped like the MG 95 gr JHP, from camming up when being stripped from the magazine and getting caught on the top of the chamber causing a jam.

    When I tried to shoot these bullets through the prior Taccom version, I couldn't even rack the first round into the chamber. Ive probably got 2,000 rounds through this one without a single problem.

  9. 1.125 is long for the Berry's bullet. If you are using the .380 profile i doubt if the bullet will stay seated in the casing, I've had those separate at 1.100. 1.100 works fine for the 9mm profile but i would still be wary of 1.125. for those. I load the .380 profile to1.080.

     

    I recently got a Taccom superfed 5.5' barrel from Tim to replace the standard Taccom 5.5' barrel I had on my PCC. That gun will now feed anything  put in it including Montana Gold 95 gr JHP bullets. The Berrys 100 gr 9mm profile will run 100% with 2.3 gr of n310. (about 70 PF). That's not the most accurate load but adequate for SC.

  10. Forgot to mention that it's a good idea to blow the Hiperfire trigger mechanism out with compressed air when you clean the gun. It's especially important to blow it out when something weird starts to happen with the trigger. Not sure if this is unique to Hiperfire but I do know that they are sensitive to crud getting in the works.

  11. So you have the red springs installed. Do you still have the green ones that came with the trigger? If so, you should try them. The green springs for the light trigger are much heavier than the red ones and are harder to install. I clamp my receiver in a vise with the front facing me.Then put the springs on their pins and grab the cross piece at the center  with a good sized  needle nosed pliers and pull the bar towards you while pushing down to get the bar in place. it's a good idea to put something soft behind the receiver to catch flying parts.

     

    Changing the springs will change other characteristics of the trigger and maybe that will take the creep out. Don't ask me why, but i have experienced this.

  12. Surprised to hear that about the Hiperfire trigger. Which springs are you using? I'm running three of these and they are all like on - off switches. about 2.2 oz avg.

    Call them, there should be no slop at all in the trigger. I'm comparing these to my Volquartsen triggers and the ones in my Limcat 2011's

    I did have a problem with one of the Hiperfires which was corrected by replacing springs after talking to their engineer. Excellent support.

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