Zorros
Ultimate Member
Clocked over 1K rounds through mine on Christmas Eve. I have one mag of four that occasionally won't lock back when empty.
Sent from my SM-G950U using Tapatalk
Shield 45? Shield 9...i see the head stamp.
Clocked over 1K rounds through mine on Christmas Eve. I have one mag of four that occasionally won't lock back when empty.
Sent from my SM-G950U using Tapatalk
Shield 45? Shield 9...i see the head stamp.
Clocked over 1K rounds through mine on Christmas Eve. I have one mag of four that occasionally won't lock back when empty.
Sent from my SM-G950U using Tapatalk
Hey stoveman try placing your support hand thumb on the front of the frame instead of under the center which is traditionally where people hold. Haven't had it fail to lockback on me yet and I'm brand new to it.
But we'll see once I run the 3 12 rounders I ordered.
Also you must have the best sig p365 on the market!
Put another 200 through it today relatively quick. (60 rounds at a time with 5 reloads). Gun started getting a little warm, especially in front of the trigger within the guard, but still didnt have to adjust firing grip. Shot another 40 rounds of double tap without issue. Only 1 issue was a Freedom Munitions reload which caused a FTFire, but when I put it back in rotation, went bang the 2nd time. Not sure if it was a hard primer or what. This was the primer Strike post failure:
That is weird. All the other primers look like the pin almost pokes a hole in them and that one looks barely scratched. I wonder if for whatever reason the slide wasn't fully locked up on that shot?
I forget which reviewer said it, but now they're saying that the mags on the 365 should be replaced after a thousand or 2,000 rounds? I honestly forget the number. Apparently, the metal is too thin and gets worn away in some area, eventually causing a malfunction? Wish I remembered more to tell you guys. I'm trying to remember if it was along the crease in the neck of the mag, or where... I don't remember the terminology used to describe it.
On day two of the pistol class the SIG 365's firing pin broke at about 2,000 rounds. Mickey documents the experience as he contacts SIG customer service to repair the handgun and what it looks like with he got it back nine days later.
scroll to 19:24 for the failure discussion
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RCgX2MsoKi8