I have a PM40 which has performed flawlessly...never an FTE nor a FTF.... That is until recently. But fortunately I found the problem. During my routine tactics training with a friend of mine who is a retired master instructor for LE, I had a couple of FTF's with reloads. The jams were so hard that it was very difficult to manually eject the partially chambered round. My first reaction was shock and embarrassment. After all, my buddy is a die hard Glock man and this was a Kahr I was shooting. When he ejected the round, he slid it in his Glock and said, "See...a Glock eats everything".
I went home and to analyze the situation. I removed my barrel and placed each reloaded round into the chamber to see what I could find. During analysis of 100 rounds, I found that I had 5 which would not go into the chamber all the way. I looked at the each round more carefully and found the casings were bulged at the body, just above the head (extraction groove). I had always only reloaded my own casings but these were casing I had picked up at the range which were co-mingled with my buddies casings, which I reloaded for myself. Never again. I am going back to only reloading my own casings. This could be a dangerous situation involving pressure.
From now on I will either mic the casings of my reloads or perform a simple check for casing bulge by removing my barrel and placing each reloaded round in the chamber, to be certain it slides in easily.
Lesson learned.
I went home and to analyze the situation. I removed my barrel and placed each reloaded round into the chamber to see what I could find. During analysis of 100 rounds, I found that I had 5 which would not go into the chamber all the way. I looked at the each round more carefully and found the casings were bulged at the body, just above the head (extraction groove). I had always only reloaded my own casings but these were casing I had picked up at the range which were co-mingled with my buddies casings, which I reloaded for myself. Never again. I am going back to only reloading my own casings. This could be a dangerous situation involving pressure.
From now on I will either mic the casings of my reloads or perform a simple check for casing bulge by removing my barrel and placing each reloaded round in the chamber, to be certain it slides in easily.
Lesson learned.
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