9mm loaded to minor is still about full power. I have not changed the spring in mine. Cycles perfectly.
Try it before changing anything.
Sorry but I beg to differ, minor PF is a lot lighter than a factory full load, the difference in recoil and muzzle flip is very noticeable to the shooter as well as to the by stander, as an RO you get used to shooters using minor PF ammo and when someone shoots factory 9mm loads it sounds and looks like they are shooting a .40 in comparison.
That being said, changing the spring is more than just having it cycle reliably, most guns will shoot minor pf with no issue, but if your using more spring than necessary, more recoil is transferred into the frame and therefore to the shooter, a lighter spring allows the slide to move easier reducing some of that felt recoil and muzzle flip which has already been reduced somewhat by using a lighter load to begin with, this in turn will reduce the time it takes to get back on target and make follow up shots that much faster.
Sorry but I beg to differ, minor PF is a lot lighter than a factory full load, the difference in recoil and muzzle flip is very noticeable to the shooter as well as to the by stander, as an RO you get used to shooters using minor PF ammo and when someone shoots factory 9mm loads it sounds and looks like they are shooting a .40 in comparison.
That being said, changing the spring is more than just having it cycle reliably, most guns will shoot minor pf with no issue, but if your using more spring than necessary, more recoil is transferred into the frame and therefore to the shooter, a lighter spring allows the slide to move easier reducing some of that felt recoil and muzzle flip which has already been reduced somewhat by using a lighter load to begin with, this in turn will reduce the time it takes to get back on target and make follow up shots that much faster.
Factory recoil spring is 16lbs. My suggestion would be to actually try it first. 3grs of Titegroup or 3.8grs of w231/hp38 for example. If it will not cycle reliably then buy a lighter spring.
Factory recoil spring is 16lbs. My suggestion would be to actually try it first. 3grs of Titegroup or 3.8grs of w231/hp38 for example. If it will not cycle reliably then buy a lighter spring.
Can you elaborate on this? It seems to me that if a gun has, say, 5 pounds of recoil energy, that amount will get transferred to the hand, regardless of the spring. If the gun has a 1 pound spring, the energy transfer would eb rather sudden, when the slide hits the frame. No? And a stiffer spring would transfer the energy over the time of the slide travel. No?
Minor with a 147 is about 850fps. Full power is about 950 fps. To me, that is close enough to leave the spring alone, unless my gun was telling me something.
Factory recoil spring is 16lbs. My suggestion would be to actually try it first. 3grs of Titegroup or 3.8grs of w231/hp38 for example. If it will not cycle reliably then buy a lighter spring.
Chances are it will cycle just fine but what you want is to go with the lightest you can that still has enough strength to reliably strip a round off the mag and close.
With a lighter spring the slide moves easier transferring less energy to the frame, with a heavier spring the slide is harder to move which transfers more energy to the frame. This is the same reason why some guys in standard and open remove material from the slide which lightens it and makes it easier to move and allows a lighter spring to cycle it. Also although light hammer springs and skeletonized hammers are used mainly to lighten double action trigger pull they also contribute to the ease of the slide cycling.
Once the breach opens the pressure is released and the slide slamming into the frame is really a non issue for what were discussing here, to have a problem that way you would need to be so light on the spring that it wouldnt be strong enough strip off the next round.
Minor with a 147 is 850 but a stock gun is built to handle a 1300fps 115 (maybe more if its +p), which, depending on the powder your using could be up to 50% more. If your running a 147 at 850fps you want just enough spring to reliably close the slide, for me that is around 9 to 10 lbs, on my old gun with several thousand rounds thru it a 9lb runs fine but on my new gun when it starts to get dirty it can hang up the odd time but runs flawless with a 10lb.
+1 ^^^^^
When I load my 9mm with hs-6, even go below the minimum, many loads still work fine on all my 9s except my g22(with 9mm barrel) which needs lighter spring. and 9mm spring is usually lighter than 40S&W spring.
Should I bother with an aftermarket guide rod or just find a spring that fits the stock guide rod?
Yes, it will function just fine but you are still using a spring that was designed to handle a 1300+ fps factory load. If your going to run the lightest feeling load that the rules allow then to get the most advantage you can from that round you need to run the lightest spring you can that will still allow the gun to function 100%, for 90% of all the IPSC shooters I know it is around 10lbs.
If you hold the gun steady with your strong hand and cycle the slide with the other hand, the lighter the recoil spring is the less effort it will take for your strong hand to hold the gun steady.
After market parts are a no no in ipsc production, most manufactures make both plastic and steel versions of guide rods as well as different rate springs, that being said some things are be impossible to tell the difference if they were factory replacement or aftermarket.
I'm taking Black Badge this weekend.
I'd be shooting in Standard as I have an APEX trigger and a few other No No's for Production.
If you have too soft if a spring and you have excessive frame to slide impact = felt recoil will go up and on top of that, why would you beat you gun up
I once tried a min load of trail boss and 200g lswc in a 1911 clone (200g x app 700fps) = 140pf and the gun even locked back on last round with a 20lb spring
you in theory just want the frame to kiss the slide not beat it with a sledge
Yes, it will function just fine but you are still using a spring that was designed to handle a 1300+ fps factory load. If your going to run the lightest feeling load that the rules allow then to get the most advantage you can from that round you need to run the lightest spring you can that will still allow the gun to function 100%, for 90% of all the IPSC shooters I know it is around 10lbs.
.......Minor with a 147 is about 850fps. Full power is about 950 fps. To me, that is close enough to leave the spring alone, unless my gun was telling me something.



























