Hi all,
I just picked up a new Sig Sauer 22LR, on sale from goTenda. I took it to the range for my first shoot, and I had quite a few problems.
First off, when I was loading the magazine, I noticed the ammunition doesn't sit uniform down the length of the clip. It seems that the spacing, no matter how I load it, is jagged. For example, some of the rounds sit at a one degree difference than the other rounds.
The first shot I took was fine, but the second there didn't seem to be a round in the barrel. I cycled the action and the round went into the chamber. I shot the rest of that magazine no problem. The next magazine did the same thing. Second pull of the trigger, click. A round did not make it into the chamber. I cycled the action, and the round entered. This magazine also emptied with no problems. I decided to take things a little more slowly after this, observing everything that I could to try and determine what was happening.
The third magazine I decided to drop the mag after the first shot, inspect the hammer position and see if one made it in. The first shot failed to eject out of the action, and kind of got caught up in there. Happens. But, when I inspected the rounds in the magazine, the next round had a dent in it. I decided to round up all the 22LR off the ground for my father and I were the only ones shooting, and he didn't break out his ruger yet. One of the other rounds that I picked up had a similar dent in pretty much the same spot.
I gave it a good shot of lube and cycled the action fifty times. It seemed to help, but I was still having FTF and ejection issues. Reading about this Sig 1911 online draws me into two conclusions.
1. The ammunition I was using wasn't strong enough to cycle the action all the way back and grab the next round. Not sure why this only would happen on the second round for each magazine, almost every time, but it was.
2. The magazine has too many coils. I read somewhere that a guy had cut five rings of his coil off, and it seemed to resolve his feed issued. This could be true, for when I am loading the magazine, it seems like everything starts going ####-eyed after six rounds loaded.
Does anyone have any suggestions for resolving this issue? I've seen some fellows suggest running a polishing dremel on the surfaces where the carrier meets the gun (sorry, my terminology is quite nubile), but I feel like that might be a last resort.
Thanks for the help everyone,
I just picked up a new Sig Sauer 22LR, on sale from goTenda. I took it to the range for my first shoot, and I had quite a few problems.
First off, when I was loading the magazine, I noticed the ammunition doesn't sit uniform down the length of the clip. It seems that the spacing, no matter how I load it, is jagged. For example, some of the rounds sit at a one degree difference than the other rounds.
The first shot I took was fine, but the second there didn't seem to be a round in the barrel. I cycled the action and the round went into the chamber. I shot the rest of that magazine no problem. The next magazine did the same thing. Second pull of the trigger, click. A round did not make it into the chamber. I cycled the action, and the round entered. This magazine also emptied with no problems. I decided to take things a little more slowly after this, observing everything that I could to try and determine what was happening.
The third magazine I decided to drop the mag after the first shot, inspect the hammer position and see if one made it in. The first shot failed to eject out of the action, and kind of got caught up in there. Happens. But, when I inspected the rounds in the magazine, the next round had a dent in it. I decided to round up all the 22LR off the ground for my father and I were the only ones shooting, and he didn't break out his ruger yet. One of the other rounds that I picked up had a similar dent in pretty much the same spot.
I gave it a good shot of lube and cycled the action fifty times. It seemed to help, but I was still having FTF and ejection issues. Reading about this Sig 1911 online draws me into two conclusions.
1. The ammunition I was using wasn't strong enough to cycle the action all the way back and grab the next round. Not sure why this only would happen on the second round for each magazine, almost every time, but it was.
2. The magazine has too many coils. I read somewhere that a guy had cut five rings of his coil off, and it seemed to resolve his feed issued. This could be true, for when I am loading the magazine, it seems like everything starts going ####-eyed after six rounds loaded.
Does anyone have any suggestions for resolving this issue? I've seen some fellows suggest running a polishing dremel on the surfaces where the carrier meets the gun (sorry, my terminology is quite nubile), but I feel like that might be a last resort.
Thanks for the help everyone,