I would lube it up and try some factory ammo and see what happens.
I am using a regular RCBS full length sizing die. I have it set as close to shell holder as possible. Should I be using a small base full length die?
What it did a few times is it would fire, eject the round, pick up the new round. When squeezing the trigger, I could hear a click, but it did not fire. After dropping the magazine and attempting to clear, the charging handle would not move. I was not able to open it up after sliding out the rear pivot pin. I needed a block of wood and a good shove on the charging handle to clear it. No obvious marks on the extracted round.
Before you mess around changing your reloads, I'd go with what has been suggested already. Run factory rounds through it and lube it up. If it does the same then you know it's something with the gun, if not then it's a good chance it's your ammo.
Side note, which range do you go shoot at?
I had my new M&P 15 out to the range today and some random jamming issues. Prior to shooting for the first time it was thoroughly cleaned and lightly lubed. It was about 4C today in Edmonton, so not that cold.
Traded my S&W Jammomatic15 for a Bushie. Problem solved.
I had my M&P 15 out to the range today and had zero jams in about 200 rounds. All of it was with reloads, but all cases carefully trimmed to spec and sized with more contact with the shell holder than my first go around. I just threw on an old Bushnell 3 x 9 on to it with some high mounts. My best target at 100 yards is attached. 5 shots into 1.17". So dam near MOA. A 10 round group on another target yielded a 2.18" group.
I am quite impressed with accuracy of my cheap AR-15.
S&W Jammomatic15



























