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Welcome back and thank you for returning to read the final installment in the Diagnosing Pistol Malfunctions series. To cover the wide range of topics in this series, I have broken the 8 elements of the cycle of operation into the three commonly accepted types of pistol malfunction. Part 1, Failure to Feed covered the first three elements: feeding, chambering, and locking. Part 2, Failure to Fire, covered the fourth and fifth elements: firing and unlocking. In Part 3, Failure to Eject, we will discuss the remaining three elements within the cycle of operation: extracting, ejecting, and cocking. Within this category of stoppages, I will analyze the three main causes: (1) failure to extract; (2) double feed; and (3) stove pipe.
In nearly all cases the slide is cycling faster than the case can be completely ejected. The potential causes span the gamut from pistol mechanics, ammunition induced, or shooter induced. [links]
A brief visual inspection of the extractor claw can indicate excessive wear, damage, or a clean break. The photo to the right compares two 1911 extractors. One clearly has a broken claw. The only remedy to this problem is a full replacement. The good news is that most manufacturers produce quality extractors that are very affordable. They can range from $15.00 to $45.00 depending on the “name brand” you go with. Wilson Combat 1911 extractors are in the mid-$30.00 range and Glock extractors are just under $20.00. Since these are such an important item, it is a good idea to keep a spare extractor or two in your range bag.
Funny mine have always worked. Except for a derringer but that is because the prior owner dry fired it which you are to never do. Also cobra has a lifetime warranty on their guns if you do the warranty.
Personally, I only go by in person reviews, in this internet age, from people proven trustworthy. That would be TTAG, and a handful of others. more
I think by nature all auto pocket pistols suck. Can’t say LCP is much better than any of these above, but it has been reliable. For this purpose, I actually switched to an NAA pug. Safe, small, and gives me some measure of security I wouldn’t have without it. here
the problem with your rating site is that it is seriously flawed.
anyone can vote on any gun whether they own or have even seen the gun in person.
until you find a way to weed out braindead haters who vote based on their idiotic and unedumacated feelings all of your results will be skewed by gun store rednecks who dont know what the word “ballistic” even means.
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If you are at an office or shared network, you can ask the network administrator to run a scan across the network looking for misconfigured or infected devices. more
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