Here is the target at 25 meters of my NP22.
Then I started firing my CF-98. As I slammed the mag in the grip, I check the bottom of the mag subconsciously. Oh cr@p! The bottom plate disengaged from the retainer. At first I wasn't sure if the mag came to the range like this. So I took it out and hammered the plate back in place. This time I inserted the mag nicely first and gave it a slap to make sure. Looked at the bottom, the plate came off again! I thought, wow! Not a good sign.
I used another mag. Same thing. At this point, I still couldn't figure where the problem was from. So I racked the slide and released. Duh! the slide didn't close! I looked down to find the bullet was caught in between the feed ramp and the mag's top retainer. I racked the slide again. Okay, this time the bullet went in. I released the hammer and was ready to fire off the first shot with DA.
To call its DA a pain in the a$$ is an understatement. Long, and extremely tight. I tried three times to pull the trigger to fire. I'm not exaggerating. Took me three time before I could fire off the first shot in DA! And I could feel the plastic trigger wiggle too. I didn't know where the bullet went.
The second shot became single action. To my surprise, the SA shots were extremely smooth and light, except for the wiggling trigger after the bang.
Then I noticed the slice was staying all the way back! I looked down, same thing, the bullet was caught in between the ramp and the mag retainer. I had to rack the slide twice to get the bullet chambered. Basically the misfeeding happened once very other shot. Not only that, the same thing happened to the other mag!
The other gunnut who was shooting right beside me was completely amazed at this.
After two mags, I finally figured out what happened. Since CF-98's mags are double stack double feeding, one side of the follower is lower, while the other side is bulged. It was always the bullets on the bulged side got caught.
Needless to say, the target was beyond recognizeable.