No trust in a gun for CC

When do you decide not to trust a gun for concealed defense?

I think whenever a new gun with less than 300 rounds through it fails to function then it is time to go.

Personally I feel any manufacturer that states their guns need a break in period are a joke. So if one of their guns fail within the break in period that is expected and acceptable? I just wonder if I called them about a gun failure would they ask me if I have shot it the suggested 500 round break in period? LOL Will they tell me call back after I met the break in period?

My Dan Wesson 1911 required a break-in period, and the instructions even said to clean and heavily lube every 50 rounds up to 400 or so. I have no problem with this, and didn't start carrying it until it had gone through the process. It's made to tolerances that are tight enough to need a bit of wear before being fully dependable, and I knew that before I bought it. The only actual malfunction it had during the break-in was due to a cheap non-factory magazine, so it all worked out just fine.

My Ruger 1911 didn't need such babying, and has never had a problem (other than the front sight snapping off while shooting :rolleyes:), and that's because it wasn't nearly as tight to begin with. It shoots fine, but isn't as accurate as the Wesson, for obvious reasons.

I've never owned a Kimber 1911, but have been told by some who do that if one calls their customer service due to a malfunction, they will indeed ask how many rounds have been fired, and will pretty much ignore you until the break-in is done. It may be that Wesson would do the same, but I haven't had to call, so I don't know.

It used to be that new cars came with instruction on engine break-in-- it's the same idea: Tight tolerances, and a bit of wear will help prevent failure.

On the revolver side of life, I'd agree that it should work right out of the box and continue to do so, although the trigger will improve with a bit of wear as well.

Should a gun require a break-in? Depends on the level of precision with which it was made. I sure wouldn't buy, say, a Colt Gold Cup and expect to be able to carry it right away.
 
With semis, I like to run them for 1000 rounds to include some carry ammo before I am confident in carrying them. With revolvers, I am usually comfortable after a couple hundred, with some carry ammo. I should mention that all of my revolvers are greater than ten years old.
 
I’ve never understood any manufacturer that recommended a 200 round break-in BEFORE the gun was reliable when I can buy one that is reliable right away. If I buy a gun that needs to go back for repair I normally sell it too b/c I’ve lost confidence in it.
 
A MATTER OF TRUST?

I include myself in that equation along with the gun. Like rolling dice, previous performance doesn't mean anything regarding future performance. Will I freeze/choke/miss, even if the gun works fine? Regarding the gun, be it a semi or revolver there is always a possibility of a bad primer, or a mechanical failure HOWEVER SLIM. ANY ftf/jam would be a major concern. When a mfg states there is a 300 break in period, I wouldn't start to worry before then. Plus 1 for a close inspection of the gun & ammo prior to CC with special attention on high primers & smooth loaded cylinder rotation for revo's and a plunk/feed/extract test for semi's.
 
I’ve never understood any manufacturer that recommended a 200 round break-in BEFORE the gun was reliable when I can buy one that is reliable right away. If I buy a gun that needs to go back for repair I normally sell it too b/c I’ve lost confidence in it.

On 1911s, it's because of how they fit the slide. There are lots of good techniques that result in good function out of the box. The problem is that they're very time-consuming, can be mucked-up, and require a good bit of skill.

Then there are methods that, well, aren't any of those things, but result in a very tight slide until the pistol is broken-in. But once they're broken-in, they shoot decently. The problem is that you shouldn't be relying on a tight slide-to-frame fitting to try and make the gun shoot any better. It's not like wear suddenly stops after 200 or 500 rounds. The end result is a pistol that just doesn't last as long.
 
I don't give it much thought and certainly don't attach an arbitrary rounds count to it. Either the gun works or it does not.
 
A friend took the plunge and bought a 9 mm Shield. After a couple hundred rounds the pistol locked up and would not function. He sent it back to S&W and they fixed it. Apparently some little wire spring jumped out of place. He still packs that pistol ... I would have dumped it!!!

Another friend had the same thing happen with a Ruger LCP, that gun was fixed but isn't carried anymore.

Murphy is always there next to you, better safe than sorry.
 
...It used to be that new cars came with instruction on engine break-in-- it's the same idea: Tight tolerances, and a bit of wear will help prevent failure...

Should a gun require a break-in? Depends on the level of precision with which it was made. I sure wouldn't buy, say, a Colt Gold Cup and expect to be able to carry it right away.

Personally, almost every semi I have purchased brand new has had a FTF of some kind in the first hundred rounds. This includes multiple Glocks, SIGs, Taurus, Walthers, and others I can't think of. I think the only semi-autos I have had that did not malfunction during their break-in were the Glock 43 I had but sold after about 200 rounds, my Tristar C100 (CZ75 copy), and my Para 1911 Expert Commander. One other problem-free break-in was a buddy's Kimber 1911. He got it years back after coming home from a deployment, put it away and forgot about it. He rediscovered it, and knowing I was a "gun guy" loaned it to me for a range session. I ran 200 rounds of a few different brands of ammo thru it without a single hiccup.

Does that mean those last four are better made than my Glock 19, 26, 36, or 42? All of them besides the G26 became reliable after the initial break-in. The G26 was completely unreliable until I upgraded the extractor system. It was the biggest piece of garbage I have ever owned.

I'm a firm believer in the break-in period, and wouldn't consider carrying a semi-auto, regardless of manufacturer, without running it thru its paces.

That said, I have also had perfect functional semi-auto pistols start acting up out of nowhere, which is why I carry revolvers 99% of the time.
 
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I agree with gman51: a good quality gun shouldn't need a break-in period. My Sigs have run great from day one & haven't missed a beat.

My advice, especially if a gun might be used to save your life -bipedal or wild beast- is always buy the best quality you can afford.

I've never experienced a problem with an S&W semi. They were 100% from the first shot.

Were I able, I'd buy an S&W Performance Center 3" 1911 9MM in a heartbeat with complete confidence in its reliability from its first shot.
 
The G26 was completely unreliable until I upgraded the extractor system. It was the biggest piece of garbage I have ever owned.

My 26 is almost frustratingly reliable! :D Completely stock, and it happily digests low-recoil ammo that gives my 34--which has a reduced-power recoil spring--complete fits!
 
My point is not how many rounds should I shoot through a gun before deciding it is dependable for carry. My point is there are far to many new guns having serious malfunctions that the guns have to be sent back to the factory. I stand by my belief that guns shot under 500 rounds having serious failure should not be happening. Either poor machining or materials, or quality control at each step of the building process is causing these failures. I guess with the cost of labor and production time for greater quality control just can't be paid for with the cost of the guns these days. A $350 semi auto would probably cost over $500 in order to pay costly quality control. Perhaps like was said above make them quick and get them sold then let the buyers inform us of the defective guns.

I just wonder were guns made 30 years ago of better quality than guns produced today? I guess that is a stupid question. Was a defective new gun almost unheard of 30 years ago?

I have a 40 year old Marlin model 60 that goes bang with every pull of the trigger but friend's new Remlin Model 60 is a jamamatic. I guess I answered my own questions.

Much like today the S&Ws and Colts from the 1970s and 80s sometimes had issues. I owned a number of S&Ws from that time. Some were excellent but I guess maybe 10% of these guns major functional issues that should have been obvious to someone with even rudimentary QA skills. Don't even get me started on the Colt Government Model problems I had back then.

In the last year I have purchased two Rugers and my wife bought a Model 67 about two years ago. I would much prefer these three guns to some of those clunkers that I owned in the 70s or 80s. Do I think that the newer guns are better than the old ones? I am not sure.

I think what I would do is understand that there are going to be some bad guns and some good ones. Get rid of the dogs. Then when I found one that shoots good and I liked, hang on to it forever.
 
From my experiences a good 92 F or Glock are good to go after any initial shooting to familiarize oneself w the weapon, they are rock stock reliable ammo type is a non-issue IMO. 1911's I have one new Government model & no I don't trust it yet...needs mucho more rounds & trust building but it sure shoots great! My EDC is a Glock 27 & I trust it 100% as well as my Berettas.
 
I don’t trust any mass manufactured, QC compromised, off the assembly line gun to be used stock for self defense.

Somewhere way north of 95% of them function reliably with all ammo.

Some are finicky with ammo.

A very few are lemons, often because of one out-of-spec part, or some stacking of tolerance limits. Sometimes a part was assembled incorrectly, be it a spring, a pin, or whatever.

Guns are machines with complex moving parts designed by people with a profit motive. Cheaper materials (MIM) assembled by less skilled folks with fewer meaningful checks sometimes produce a substandard gun.

Given an out-the-door <$650 gun is not custom fitted with high quality parts, careful assembly and rigorous proof firing, including accuracy, I feel an obligation to prove or even improve my new gun, often even before I shoot it.

Why?

I want my gun to function perfectly right from the beginning. I have had many new guns hiccup in the first 200 rounds. That doesn’t take me back to the zero confidence I have for an unproven gun—it takes me below that confidence level because now I know it is not reliable for EDC. Now the proofing will take even longer. Stress.

So, I detail strip and clean a new gun, inspecting each part for quality, function, finish, fit. Knowing a part is MIM, I’ll just replace it with steel. If a mating part benefits from being smooth, I polish it, and that is a lot of parts. Yes, I sometimes use a Dremel; other times 800 or 1000 grit wet/dry sandpaper by hand. I polish the inside of the barrel with bore paste to get rid of tiny machining burrs. I remove sharp corners and edges. I may enhance the grip.

I may install aftermarket parts that are superior to OEM parts so the gun will be even more reliable, accurate, shootable for me.

I coat the parts with oil that bonds to the metal and put it in a low temp oven for 20 minutes. I reassemble with grease everywhere there are moving parts.

This takes me 3-5 hours depending on the gun and my familiarity with it. I call it bonding. In truth, for a small investment in parts and materials, I am effectively turning a $450 OEM gun into a $1200 custom gun that will shoot more comfortably, reliably and accurately for me from the first shot onward.

Never had a failure because everything is run through extensive dry firing, including with dummy rounds, before live firing. I know and can feel the gun. Yep, I still test it live fire for ~200 ball rounds and then 50 of my carry load.

I hear those of you who say this should not be necessary. I hear if you experience a problem (very unlikely) send it back. BTDT. It’s aggravating, out of my control, often doesn’t work when returned, and you rarely actually find out what they did to fix it. And it takes a silly long time. If a cheap failed part is replaced with another cheap part, what’s gonna happen? If a guy has to repair X guns a day to catch up with the backlog, and he’s the newest guy on the line anyway, has your quality improved—or maybe decreased?

I enjoy getting to know a new gun intimately, and I have an increased pride in ownership because of the way it feels and shoots accurately and reliably. It’s worth it to me.
 
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AUTO-Couple hundred rounds to find the ammo the gun likes, good cleaning, couple hundred more, good cleaning, repeat until 500-700 rounds 100% reliable. THEN, I'll trust the gun and hope the QA/QC of the ammo doesn't go bad. REVOLVER-simply a matter of building trust in your ammo.(BTW, all I'll carry in a defensive handgun is Hornady ).:)
 
I went through just about all the little 9mm semi autos out there and all had some kind of issues. I Bought a brand new Ruger LC9s the first shot the trigger stuck back.....until I bought a Glock 43 DONE! Oh yea the Sheild was fine I just didn’t care fo it. Break in’s are a waste of time and money. The gun should function right out of the box. Sure you test it to sure it’s fine but that’s it.

Agree but for a tuned 1911. They will require a certain amount of losing to reach max reliability imo. Correct, any modern pistol design should be gtg out of the box once cleaned & lubed. Now whether it feeds your chosen jhp ammo is another story all together.
 
Personally, almost every semi I have purchased brand new has had a FTF of some kind in the first hundred rounds. This includes multiple Glocks, SIGs, Taurus, Walthers, and others I can't think of. I think the only semi-autos I have had that did not malfunction during their break-in were the Glock 43 I had but sold after about 200 rounds, my Tristar C100 (CZ75 copy), and my Para 1911 Expert Commander. One other problem-free break-in was a buddy's Kimber 1911. He got it years back after coming home from a deployment, put it away and forgot about it. He rediscovered it, and knowing I was a "gun guy" loaned it to me for a range session. I ran 200 rounds of a few different brands of ammo thru it without a single hiccup.

Does that mean those last four are better made than my Glock 19, 26, 36, or 42? All of them besides the G26 became reliable after the initial break-in. The G26 was completely unreliable until I upgraded the extractor system. It was the biggest piece of garbage I have ever owned.

I'm a firm believer in the break-in period, and wouldn't consider carrying a semi-auto, regardless of manufacturer, without running it thru its paces.

That said, I have also had perfect functional semi-auto pistols start acting up out of nowhere, which is why I carry revolvers 99% of the time.

See I have had the opp exp. Except for a tuned 1911, every pistol I have was 100% out of the box with ball ammo, without exception. Clean it, lube it, shoot it, they should all work with ball ammo. JHP, find one that runs 100% regardless of the current "best",
 
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Unlike most here, I require a gun to go at least 500 rounds without being cleaned and no failures of any kind before I'll carry it.

This one passed...
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It is sitting on the 749 spent casings I fired that day. I got it home, field stripped it, lubed it and went to the range. Unfortunately one of the rounds was damaged during manufacture so it wouldn't go into the chamber. Otherwise it would have been 750. ;)
 
Been threw that right now with a Springfield X D S 45. I am with those 250 rounds flawless is a go for me for carry. The Springfield would not feed a full magazine till 500. After that it was good till last trip went back to no feed no fire. I called Springfield when I bought it 3 years ago. I got the you need to run 1000 rounds threw it sir for break end. I called after 200 real rough rounds. I then said so when can I expect the 800 break in round to get to my adress ? Dead pin drop from other end of phone. I knew after that call I made a unwise buy. Never again Springfield
 
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