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MemphisMechanic

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Posts posted by MemphisMechanic

  1. A broken M&P striker is quite common. Happens a lot with dryfired guns.

    The neat thing abou the M&P, though, is that the trigger moves through it's full range of motion without cocking the slide for every shot: Once mines is dryfired, I leave that snapcap in the chamber and just repeatedly pull the dead trigger to simulate firing: El-Prez (with a speed reload), two-reload-two, etc... all of those can be simulated pretty well.

    For slide-lock reloads, I use snapcaps, and will fire-reload-fire by actually dropping the striker. But for anything other than group shooting or slide-lock reloads, I'm not actually dryfiring the gun.

  2. Other than dry fire practice, how would one correct a flinch?

    I am bored and watching some youtube videos and one guy said he thinks dry fire practice to correct a flinch just makes it worse.

    You're first mistake was giving some random guy on YouTube any sort of credibility.

    Rob Leatham for example is one of the few who slaps the trigger. But what he can do that most can't, is practice follow through when slapping.

    Remember that this is a guy who can ride your finger with his while you shoot, and tell you what you're doing wrong.

    Dryfire absolutely helps cure a flinch. But make it hard. For this type of practice, I'll take a light switch 20+ feet away, and slowly squeeze off a couple of dozen well-aimed shots (centered on the switch lever as the shot breaks).

  3. Anyway, more importantly, I would like to thank Todd and Dustin for letting me take this class. I was laid-off from my job last thursday. I called Todd to cancel after I got the news. Todd called me friday and told me to take the class anyway. (I have taken the Defensive Pistol class and the Advanced Conceal Carry class twice.) He told me I was a good customer and to just show up - it was on them!

    Nice

    I think they just made my 'short list' of schools I need to attend.

  4. That looks beautiful.

    The info came from Dan Burwell, whom you've most assuredly heard of. I'm buying a bone stock 9L next week, and I can weigh the slide then. I'd like to verify this personally, now that you've got me curious.

    Stock sights, barrel, and recoil assembly is 18.2oz on the Pro? We'll see about the 9L before I change the sights.

    Oh, and that's a beautiful Limited gun. :D

  5. Pretty much the same animal as the Glock, with a little longer reset. I do not like a trigger lighter than 4.0-4.5 pounds personally, and I could've saved a lot of money spent with Glockworx and Vanek figuring that out, and maybe even made Master more quickly in the process.

    I shot my first weekly indoor match with the M&P 9L last night, and won overall by about the same margin as last week with the Glock. Given that it's an entirely new platform, I was very happy with that.

    I had to give the gun back to it's owner tonight. I'll be buying one sometime soon.

  6. Which trigger in the 34? I've had... like... eleven.

    The 9L comes with the same trigger as the regular gun. The M&P PRO comes with a Performance Center trigger job and decent sights to replace the mediocre standard gun's sights.

    The 9L comes with plain 3-dot sights, and a factory trigger. But if you're planning on trigger work and a sight change from what the PRO uses anyway, it's cheaper in the long run. The 9L slide is also lighter by nearly 2oz, so it's like getting production/SSP legal slide lightening. :koolaid:

    I haven't shot one match with it, yet. Fired it for the first time today, and had some serious issues - mostly with primers going 'CLICK' and my weak thumb rubbing on the slide, jamming the gun. Gotta retool my grip.

  7. I did it three times in a row with an M&P 9L, running a 13lb spring.

    Chambered a round, did it again and sent dummy #1 shooting across the room, did it again and sent dummy #2 clean into a very expensive picture frame.

    That was about in the middle of a 5 minute long series of attempts. It's been two days, and my arm hurts bad enough my eyes almost water when I try it now. :)

    With my 34, I've gotten a round caught 80% of the way into the chamber, but that's it. Short-stroked just a hair. That gun is also running a 13-lb spring with 3 coils cut off.

  8. In nearly every case, this is the result of too much crimp. In a 9mm, the tension on the bullet is provided by the taper of the case, NOT by the crimp. Crimping the round actually reduces the friction between the brass and the cartridge. In a 9mm, you need to think of the crimp station as simply a flare-removal die.

    You bell/flare the brass, drop powder and press a bullet into the case, and then crimp. At the crimp, remove enough flare so that there's no more fish-mouth to the case, and stop when the walls are straight. Just the slightest bit of inward bend is all you need. Look at a factory round for an example.

    More info is needed.

    What brand and weight bullet?

    what press?

    die used?

    brass headstamp? (all same, or mixed?)

    What length are you loading them to?

  9. Huh? The 21 and 21SF use the same magazines, as long as the SF isn't fitted with an ambidextrous mag catch. Then the SF needs an identical mag with an extra cutout on the front.

    All of the difference in the SF is found in the backstrap, and in the polymer trigger mechanism housing which sits inside the backstrap.

  10. I can't find it on the Glock website... what is the warranty for a Glock?

    Pretty much lifetime.

    Local buddy has a G34 with a serial number that dates around 98, and he cracked the slide at the front edge of the ejection port somewhere between 100,000 and 120,000 rounds. Sent the gun in, and it came back with a new slide.

    Three weeks after he got it back, the left rear lug ripped out of the frame. Sent it in again, and had the same result. They replaced every slide internal the first time, and all the frame internals the second. Basically the only thing left is the barrel.

    When the slide broke, it was only discovered because the gun began shooting a foot to the left at about 10 yards. The missing frame lug was found when it was broken down to clean - the pistol ran perfectly on three.

    Oh, and pretty much every round that gun ever ate was a reload, and they repaired it no-questions-asked. :(

  11. I keep track by the thousand, as that's how many primer tubes I have for my dillon (10 tubes x 100 primers ea)... So I tend to load a thousand at a time, burn through that, and load another about 2-3 weeks later when it's gone.

    My carry gun (Glock 19) only has about 6,500 through it. Approximately.

    My IDPA/USPSA Production G34, has... er, somewhere around 50K through it. Anywhere between 42k and 55k would be about right.

    Oh, and for haters of Glock's fragile recoil assembly (those of you who shun the gun, or install a metal rod immediately) I have worn out three 13lb ISMI recoil springs. But I'm still on the factory original guide rod.

  12. It will teach you to shoot on the move, reload, vary your shot cadence as distance/difficulty varies, draw in a hurry without fumbling, and other very applicable skills helpful in using a pistol in defense.

    But it is shot for score, and your enemy is the clock.

    Learning to competently shoot an IDPA course will allow you to stand out at CIS, Tactical Response, Front Sight, LFI, or any other training school you attend. But do not mistake it for actual training in and of its self.

  13. Wow. A Glock owner leery of Titegroup. That's like a fish being wary of water. :biglol:

    In the IPDA National Championship for the past two years running, about 70% of us that shoot Glocks were using an FMJ bullet, and Titegroup.

    I've personally moved on to Solo1000 for competition loads (as it's slightly softer shooting than TG for the same power factor, but can be used under lead or moly without smoking like a freight train).

    Titegroup is a wonderful powder for FMJs in Glocks, and meters like a dream in a Dillon powder measure (I run a 650). 3.2gr under a 147, 3.8gr under a 124, and 4.1 gr under a 115 produce a 130PF load when shot through a Glock 34. Loading a 115gr FMJ over 4.3-4.5 grains Titegroup will get you a WWBish load that is noticeably cleaner that WWB is. Titegroup is a pretty clean powder.

  14. For the past week...

    I get off work between 4:30-5:00, go home, run 1-2 miles, come back home, and dryfire for half an hour.

    Buy Refinement and Repetition by Steve Anderson. Best shooting-related book ever. It's nothing but dryfire drills. Some form of structure is the best thing you can do for your practice.

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