This is a pic of the .45 ammo that has been sitting in the new 1911 for the last couple of weeks. I've never seen setback this prominent so quickly.
My question- is this normal for .45 ammo, or just Magtech 230 FMJ?
MasonK wrote:This is a pic of the .45 ammo that has been sitting in the new 1911 for the last couple of weeks. I've never seen setback this prominent so quickly.
My question- is this normal for .45 ammo, or just Magtech 230 FMJ?
MasonK wrote:This is a pic of the .45 ammo that has been sitting in the new 1911 for the last couple of weeks. I've never seen setback this prominent so quickly.
My question- is this normal for .45 ammo, or just Magtech 230 FMJ?
XDM45 wrote:...and this my friends is why I DON'T carry one chambered or leave it in chambered in my .45ACP.
FJ540 wrote:XDM45 wrote:...and this my friends is why I DON'T carry one chambered or leave it in chambered in my .45ACP.
Do tell... How is it being in the chamber and walking around is any different than being in the mag?
After all, they don't fire unless you first put it in the hole.
plblark wrote:You're saying the setback occurred with it just sitting in the chamber?
MasonK wrote:plblark wrote:You're saying the setback occurred with it just sitting in the chamber?
Took it for a test drive a week ago, came home and cleaned her up; loaded and charged with factory Magtech right out of the box and put her in storage. I just pulled it out to load the snap caps and practice drawing and speed reloads and that's what I found.
I can't say I've ever seen setback like that, even on rounds chambered and rechambered a dozen times. I recall someone here talking about taking a micrometer to their numerously rechambered carry rounds and not seeing more than the tiniest fraction of setback.
Unfortunately, I don't have a micrometer handy here at home to give exact measurements.
XDM45 wrote:When you chamber a round by racking the slide, it can cause setback if you chamber the same round over and over again. I have never heard seen setback occur on a round chambered once, nor (until now), have I heard of setback occurring from a .45ACP round just sitting in the chamber for a long time; but my theory (now proven by the OP) is that such setback can happen. Maybe this setback isn't an issue for 9mm, .40, but for .45ACP, it is. I also know that some people will "drop" a round in vs. racking it, gently sliding the rack, etc, all of which I think is a bad idea on any gun, let alone a carry weapon.
MasonK wrote:XDM45 wrote:When you chamber a round by racking the slide, it can cause setback if you chamber the same round over and over again. I have never heard seen setback occur on a round chambered once, nor (until now), have I heard of setback occurring from a .45ACP round just sitting in the chamber for a long time; but my theory (now proven by the OP) is that such setback can happen. Maybe this setback isn't an issue for 9mm, .40, but for .45ACP, it is. I also know that some people will "drop" a round in vs. racking it, gently sliding the rack, etc, all of which I think is a bad idea on any gun, let alone a carry weapon.
Early on I used to drop a round into the tube and close the slide, but I noticed that the rim would get bent by the ejector arm while a magazine load of the round didn't because, well, I was doing something I shouldn't be doing with that particular gun. Now I load the mag, and let the spring move the action since I figure the engineers know how hard the slide should move. So to answer your question, nothing unusual about how I load a gun. No jamming the action or gently rolling it in.
MasonK wrote:And by early on, I mean early in my firearms ownership in the 90s, not last week!
XDM45 wrote:MasonK wrote:And by early on, I mean early in my firearms ownership in the 90s, not last week!
Got it.
MasonK wrote:XDM45 wrote:MasonK wrote:And by early on, I mean early in my firearms ownership in the 90s, not last week!
Got it.
I figured; that was more for thread clarity so this doesn't turn into 8 pages asking why I am tube-feeding my guns.
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