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Posts posted by Explosiveo
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Yes. Absolutely buy it.
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A Shadow 2 with a dot is a great pistol. Great option. It won't hold a candle to a 2011 open gun but if your on a budget it's a great way to go. You could always mill your slide and shoot it for a while while you save up for a 2011.
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That's the silliest thing I've ever heard. I mean not really. It's just a expression.
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Overall is not a thing. Your only competing against your division.
You may place higher in the overall rank if you shoot a hicap division. It may even make you more compeditive. But really your compeditors are the people in your division and class. Look more at how you are finishing against them.
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check that your extractor is not hitting your barrel.
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"Last two have been mostly malfunction remedy drills... "
That's how it was for me before I got MBX mags.
Just watch the springs. If you shoot a lot. You need new springs 2-3 times per year on your 170. Assuming you use MBX springs.
The 155s and 140s last longer.
As soon as I see any kind of malfunctions with my 170s, I replace the springs and they are back to 100%. I've seen rounds flip under the follower when the springs need replaced. That's the most common. Recently I had a couple stovepipes and a friend said it could be mag spring related. Seemed to fix it.
In a couple years of use they have never needed tuning.
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Mine worked fine as they came. I have only seen issues where the gun wasn't set up right. For instance the feed ramp not cut back out of the magwell.
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Well you could do the same in 9 major then. Not something I would do.
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"Doesn’t 38 SC allow you to run coated bullets"
No, 38sc has nothing to do with being able to run coated bullets. People don't run coated bullets in open because of two things.
1. The bullets are pushed at a high velocity and coated bullets will sometimes break apart at those speeds.
2. Coated bullets tend to lead up the compensator which can be a nightmare to clean and can also be dangerous if not cleaned for extended periods of time.
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It's hard to believe but in the long run it will cost less and be much more enjoyable to spend a little more and buy a new gun from a reputable builder that stands behind their work and has some type of warranty.
This is coming from someone who bought a couple used guns starting out and now owns a custom built gun. If I had it to do over.vi would save up and spend the 5500-6k on my current gun right off the bat. Would have saved me so much money, time and frustration.
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Put that extra money you would have spent on 38sc brass into a really nice custom gun. Like a Rafferty. That will run just as well as a 38sc gun. In 9 major and then you can just focus on shooting and having fun. Worrying about picking up brass on every stage ruins the experience.
With 9 you can still pick up all your brass at practice and if you feel like it and have time at matches. But your not forced to do it.
You don't have to mark your brass for ease of picking up. I don't get why anyone still shoots 38sc. Nobody in my local area does. But there are other areas close by that everyone does. I think it's just because when new people get into open, they do what everyone else around them is doing.
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If you can afford the mark 7 buy it. It's better.
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I wouldn't recommend auto driving a 650 is that is what your asking. It will break a lot. Huge headache.
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Option 3
1100 autodriven. 2 tool heads. 1 for brass processing and one for loading.
You could add a 3rd if you want to have one for loading 9 and one for loading .223
That's the route I went with.
Although I would like to get a Mark 7 at some point. They are awesome. I have a friend that has one. So I have seen it up close. The biggest benifit is the additional die positions on the tool head after the powder drop. Which allows for powder check while keeping seperate seat and crimp dies.
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Haha. He is exactly right though. 115s at 125pf are 1100fps. So loaded a little faster would be close in snappiness.
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You can load in that range with minor powders. That's what I would tend to do if your looking for the feel of major since it would be snappier. Keep it at 145 and under.
I know major powders like HS6 can be loaded down in that range too. But it will likely be super dirty.
If you have a minor and major powder on hand, you could develop a load for each in that range and see what you like better. But of coarse be careful that is getting in the upper end of some minor powders. Like tightgroup builds a lot of pressure at higher charges and might not be a good minor powder to load up too much.
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Probably 115 gr loaded a little hot 145-150 PF will be close in feel.
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Gotcha. Maybe "disagree" was a typo?Exactly! I should've made myself clearer... CO is a totally different game, Open is another. Frame mounted optic provides you with a lot of a greater versatility indeed~
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True. However. Open is not Carry Optics.Yup, I can't disagree with you more~ However, it does work for "some" that's why CO division exist [emoji4]
It is a benefit to have a frame mounted dot. If it wasn't then you would see a lot more people choosing to have slide ride dots in open. But it's extreamly uncommon.
My point is that it's in your best interest to take every advantage that is given in a division.
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Ya. I would love to get a rollsizer. But can't afford right now. So bandaid it is.
I process all my brass before hand for loading.
Rollsize
FW. Arms universal self centering decapper
FW. Arms swage back up
station 4 is www.thejudgedie.com with sensor to catch all the stepped brass
station 5 is dillon size die (I NEVER undersize, its a bandaid, and wrong. Rollsizing brass is proper BEFORE sizing)
Loading
Lee Universal decapper to catch anything that may of gotten in there
Lyman M die in primer station
MBF powder funnel in 4
MBF bullet feeder in 5
Redding micrometer seating die
dillon crimp die
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What's your die setup?I have the CNC toolheads from Immortobot, I have some of the OPM toolheads and some others. They all work well, just depends on what you want out of the different toolheads. Getting the station over the primer station is imperative if you are loading IMHO
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Super 1050
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Don't do it. It doesn't make sense. Frame mounted optics are one of the huge benefits of open division. By mounting your dot on the slide you are putting yourself at a huge disadvantage off the bat.
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Yep. I found that out the hard way. Luckily didn't bend anything . But it is a bummer. I need to figure out another way to stop the case feed or modify this to work.
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Super 1050 - Primers keep dropping out of the exit hole and not feeding to the shell plate
in Dillon Precision Reloading Equipment
Posted
It's probably the blue tip at the bottom of the primer tube. It's a consumable part that needs replaced every so often.
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