The gas tube issue you had would not affect failures to feed when manually cycling the weapon.
What mags do you have?
When does it occur? Whole mag, or just first/last rounds?
Are the mags seating correctly?
What ammo are you using? Have you tried different ammo?
Did you assemble it from parts, or just throw in the BCG and drop a fully assembled upper onto a fully assembled lower?
Regards.
Mark
Clearly, LMT makes crappy AR parts (just kidding).
I'm going to assume you did not mate a non-M4 profile barrel extension to an M4 upper receiver? If so, that could be your problem.
![]()
Clearly, LMT makes crappy AR parts (just kidding).
I'm going to assume you did not mate a non-M4 profile barrel extension to an M4 upper receiver? If so, that could be your problem.
![]()
I am using the factory LMT mag
Jams happen anytime
Mags are seated correctly
Using Winchester 223 ammo (haven't tried others)
The lower was brand new fully assembled from a 12.5" LMT Piston that I had (MRP I think). The fully assembled upper is a LMT 10.5" I bought off CGN. I added a LMT FA BCG from Questar.
This probably has nothing to do with your problem, but what weight buffer are you running?
I think Easy is looking at whether the ammo you are using is hollow point or not. HP can cause feed issues in some rifles. Try a different brand of ammo that does not have HP bullets?
However, that does not explain a failure to pick up a round from the chamber when manually cycling. When in fails this way, does the bolt ride right over top of the cartridge or start to pick it up and then looses it when the bullet tip jams against the receiver/barrel extension.
Regardless, my thought is that perhaps there a problem with your mag. Beg, borrow, buy another mag and see if the same problem occurs.
When charging the bolt will just ride right over the round and not budge it. When it jams it actually picks up a round and it jams with the bolt open and usually dents the neck of the cartridge.
As I said I did get an H2 buffer fut I dont think I changed the spring, could that cause short stroking?
If the lower was originally from a 12.5" piston MRP then it has an H2 buffer... Combine that with underpowered .223 ammo instead of 5.56nato and this could explain your problems. Hard to tell without seeing the gun but start there.
Mark



























