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February 4th, 2010, 22:31 | #1 |
Hi-capa failure to return to battery
I recently aquired a KJW Hi-Capa with an intermittent issue where the outer barrel is too far forward when the slide has returned. All parts are stock KJW and I believe the gun has been moderately gamed.
When the failure occurs it causes the outer barrel to protrude 2-3mm further than normal out the front of the slide and a simillar gap between the rear of the outer barrel and the opening of the slide. The slide is in the correct position and the friction between the outer barrel and the slide is sufficent to prevent the action from cycling. The next shot causes the remaining gas in the magazine to vent. It can be returned to the correct state by lightly striking the front of the outer barrel. I examined the pistol in as much detail as my minimal experience allowed. -There are no obvious areas of wear. -When cycled manually it is smooth with no catching or sticking. -The most obvious points of wear on the outer are the 2 points of contact where the bushing supports the barrel. -The lugs on the slide have a little wear that has softened the corners and the grooves in the outer barrel appear to be square. - the loading nozzle is lubed and moves freely. There are no marks indicating an impact with anything. It happens intermittently when firing but can be reproduced reliably by using the slide release with the pistol pointed upwards. Mag in or out does not make a difference Some of the fixes I have considered are 1. A new slide and/or outer barrel seems the most obvious possibility. Also potentially the most costly. 2. A stronger recoil spring. I'm unsure of this one. 3. Replace the barrel/Hop up combination. Any assistance in solving this would be appreciated. Thanks in advance |
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February 4th, 2010, 22:34 | #2 |
Can't fix my own guns. Willing to fix yours.
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there is an expensive solution, and a more expensive solution, talk to illusion, he can do a stationary barrel that will prevent the jams, or a spring loaded barrel setup that will also prejent the jams. either way, its upwards of $150
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February 4th, 2010, 22:47 | #3 |
Slow mo.
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Or another super expensive solution...
Get TM hi capa. Kidding, check both disconnector pieces (the metal bouncy pieces that poke up at the rear of your gun) to make sure they're springy. See if the slide catches on either of those two things.
__________________
The ultimate measure of a man is not where he stands in moments of comfort and convenience, but where he stands at times of challenge and controversy. - Martin Luther King, Jr. |
February 5th, 2010, 11:20 | #4 |
GBB Whisperer
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This is caused by the crappy tolerances between the slide and the barrel. Over time and use, the barrel eventually chews through the lugs in the slide that are used to engage the chamber and pull it back. Once the lugs are worn down and the slide can no longer reliably grab & pull the barrel back, the slide ends up getting caught on the top of the chamber, which dramatically increases the damage to the slide.
At this point, there are three solutions, but only two of them are reliable:
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