manbearpig
CGN Ultra frequent flyer
- Location
- Somewhere in the Third World
ive heard a lot about M-14s and slamfires with soft primers.
most commercial ammo has soft primers, and i assume the risk of improperly seated primers increases with cheaper ammo like some of the $10-12/box .308 softpoints. ive read of this occurring especially with cheap remmy UMC ammo. with surplus ammo stocks drying up, is there any type of commercial ammo specifically made for semi-autos like the garand, M14, etc? ie: with a slightly recessed, harder primer?
the posts on the M14 slamfire issue seem pretty divided - some people say that its all BS and you have nothing to worry about, others say it happens often.
regardless of how likely it is to occur, is there anything you can do to minimize the risk of a slamfire? its a floating firing pin so you cant do something like upgrade the firing pin return spring, but is there anything you can upgrade or have your gunsmith do to reduce the risk of slamfires? a replacement firing pin?
i always have any rifle pointed somewhere safe when i chamber a round, so im not too worried about the 'accidental discharge' part of a slamfire, more about the possible 'kaboom' aspect if it goes off before the bolt locks up.
most commercial ammo has soft primers, and i assume the risk of improperly seated primers increases with cheaper ammo like some of the $10-12/box .308 softpoints. ive read of this occurring especially with cheap remmy UMC ammo. with surplus ammo stocks drying up, is there any type of commercial ammo specifically made for semi-autos like the garand, M14, etc? ie: with a slightly recessed, harder primer?
the posts on the M14 slamfire issue seem pretty divided - some people say that its all BS and you have nothing to worry about, others say it happens often.
regardless of how likely it is to occur, is there anything you can do to minimize the risk of a slamfire? its a floating firing pin so you cant do something like upgrade the firing pin return spring, but is there anything you can upgrade or have your gunsmith do to reduce the risk of slamfires? a replacement firing pin?
i always have any rifle pointed somewhere safe when i chamber a round, so im not too worried about the 'accidental discharge' part of a slamfire, more about the possible 'kaboom' aspect if it goes off before the bolt locks up.