Ran through about 170 rounds of the Atlanta Arms remanufactured .45ACP ball (230 grain FMJ/RN at 735 fps) on Saturday. First time use of the ammo - liked the reduced recoil over factory ball such as Blazer, S&B or American Eagle (what I usually shoot), but encountered a couple of failures to seat the slide fully into battery.
There are a couple of factors that could be bearing on this, including:
1) Chamber not cleaned in a while.
2) Gun recently returned from a smith who had blasted the frame and slide with a combination of glass and aluminum oxide beads. While I know he cleaned it, rinsed it and dried it before re-assembling, there may be some residual grit.
I can solve #1 easily with a chamber brush and solvent, and will take the gun all the way down to the bare frame, thoroughly clean it SLIP 2000 725 cleaner/degreaser, then re-assemble and re-lube it.
Those variables aside, I'm running a 16 pound recoil spring. Do any of you who used reduced power loads similar to the Atlanta Arms load above use a lighter weight recoil spring? I wondered whether the 16 pound spring might be retarding full rearward slide travel.
Thanks.
There are a couple of factors that could be bearing on this, including:
1) Chamber not cleaned in a while.
2) Gun recently returned from a smith who had blasted the frame and slide with a combination of glass and aluminum oxide beads. While I know he cleaned it, rinsed it and dried it before re-assembling, there may be some residual grit.
I can solve #1 easily with a chamber brush and solvent, and will take the gun all the way down to the bare frame, thoroughly clean it SLIP 2000 725 cleaner/degreaser, then re-assemble and re-lube it.
Those variables aside, I'm running a 16 pound recoil spring. Do any of you who used reduced power loads similar to the Atlanta Arms load above use a lighter weight recoil spring? I wondered whether the 16 pound spring might be retarding full rearward slide travel.
Thanks.