pvq
Member
For those that would prefer not to engage in a long read, the thread title says it all. Here is a longer story.
I actually have three UC 32 H&R magnums, one 432 and 2 632’s. The 432 was my first purchase and I was very happy with it. I had no problems at all with Buffalo Boar or PPU 32 S&W Long Ammo. When I finally got some lost River ammo, I was having about a 10% failure rate with the 432. All of the rounds went off on the second try. After speaking with Ted at Lost River Ammo, and lots of research on this forum, I decided to invest in a TKCustom extended firing pin, thinking that would surely solve my problem. To be honest, when I was looking at the primer indentations, I could not discern that one was lighter than the other, it just failed to fire, but I assumed it must be a less than optimal strike.
The TK Custom firing pin made matters worse. Three out of ten rounds failed to fire on the first try. I also appears to my untrained eye that the TKC firing pin has a different profile because on rounds that failed to fire on the first trigger pull, the primer indentation was very shallow.
At this point, I pulled out my two 632 revolvers and tried to get through at least 30 rounds of Lost River Ammo without a failure to fire. One of my revolvers was able to do so…the other could not.
I guess the easy answer to my problem is don’t use Lost River Ammo, but the ammunition is of superb quality and quite frankly I’ve never in my life owned a revolver that wouldn’t shoot everything I fed it , so the fact that two out of my 3 32 caliber revolvers are not reliable with it is discomforting to me. Obviously I am not going to use it for carry at this point, but this issue needs to be resolved.
Needless to say I put back the factory firing pin and the two guns that won’t fire the Lost River Ammo are headed back to S&W for evaluation. It’s worthy of note that the revolver that does function properly is the most recent serial number.,, and ironically, that gun was sent back almost as soon as I received it because it would not open and close smoothly. Also worthy of note is that the gun that is functioning 100% seems to have a more shallow, although more uniform primer indentation. I have no way of measuring it…that’s just what it looks like to me. I’m not sure if there have been any iterative upgrades to these guns, but the fact that the most recently manufactured one seems to be the most reliable, give me some hope that they may have identified the issue and be able to make my other two will revolvers sufficient for every day carry.
Thank you in advance for your thoughts and experiences.
I actually have three UC 32 H&R magnums, one 432 and 2 632’s. The 432 was my first purchase and I was very happy with it. I had no problems at all with Buffalo Boar or PPU 32 S&W Long Ammo. When I finally got some lost River ammo, I was having about a 10% failure rate with the 432. All of the rounds went off on the second try. After speaking with Ted at Lost River Ammo, and lots of research on this forum, I decided to invest in a TKCustom extended firing pin, thinking that would surely solve my problem. To be honest, when I was looking at the primer indentations, I could not discern that one was lighter than the other, it just failed to fire, but I assumed it must be a less than optimal strike.
The TK Custom firing pin made matters worse. Three out of ten rounds failed to fire on the first try. I also appears to my untrained eye that the TKC firing pin has a different profile because on rounds that failed to fire on the first trigger pull, the primer indentation was very shallow.
At this point, I pulled out my two 632 revolvers and tried to get through at least 30 rounds of Lost River Ammo without a failure to fire. One of my revolvers was able to do so…the other could not.
I guess the easy answer to my problem is don’t use Lost River Ammo, but the ammunition is of superb quality and quite frankly I’ve never in my life owned a revolver that wouldn’t shoot everything I fed it , so the fact that two out of my 3 32 caliber revolvers are not reliable with it is discomforting to me. Obviously I am not going to use it for carry at this point, but this issue needs to be resolved.
Needless to say I put back the factory firing pin and the two guns that won’t fire the Lost River Ammo are headed back to S&W for evaluation. It’s worthy of note that the revolver that does function properly is the most recent serial number.,, and ironically, that gun was sent back almost as soon as I received it because it would not open and close smoothly. Also worthy of note is that the gun that is functioning 100% seems to have a more shallow, although more uniform primer indentation. I have no way of measuring it…that’s just what it looks like to me. I’m not sure if there have been any iterative upgrades to these guns, but the fact that the most recently manufactured one seems to be the most reliable, give me some hope that they may have identified the issue and be able to make my other two will revolvers sufficient for every day carry.
Thank you in advance for your thoughts and experiences.