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re: My new Glock 19 jams a bunch
Posted on 1/13/14 at 5:44 pm to meauxjeaux2
Posted on 1/13/14 at 5:44 pm to meauxjeaux2
(no message)
This post was edited on 11/7/15 at 7:15 am
Posted on 1/13/14 at 6:47 pm to LSUwag
It's pretty hard to jam a Glock due to lubrication -- unless maybe you get too much in the chamber (shouldn't have any in there, nor any in the bore).
It's easy to get failures-to-fire if you get oil & the resulting goop in the striker channel. But the OP didn't mention FTF's.
I doubt if it's the position of the guide rod (first step, second step, etc). It should be placed into the "step" that's closest to the barrel -- but it may well jump to the other step while firing. No big deal.
Over-oiling any pistol, including Glocks, isn't good. So is under-lubing one. But that's unlikely to cause a firing//extraction//ejection issue.
I'm still not clear on exactly what's happening. I think the OP said "failure-to eject" --- but it sounds like the empty casing is not being extracted from the chamber (failure-to-extract), and then he's getting a double-feed ???
p.s. I'll still be glad to meet the OP at Precision. If we can't resolve the issue, I give him $75 for that POS.
It's easy to get failures-to-fire if you get oil & the resulting goop in the striker channel. But the OP didn't mention FTF's.
I doubt if it's the position of the guide rod (first step, second step, etc). It should be placed into the "step" that's closest to the barrel -- but it may well jump to the other step while firing. No big deal.
Over-oiling any pistol, including Glocks, isn't good. So is under-lubing one. But that's unlikely to cause a firing//extraction//ejection issue.
I'm still not clear on exactly what's happening. I think the OP said "failure-to eject" --- but it sounds like the empty casing is not being extracted from the chamber (failure-to-extract), and then he's getting a double-feed ???
p.s. I'll still be glad to meet the OP at Precision. If we can't resolve the issue, I give him $75 for that POS.
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