Diagnosing based on the term "failure to feed" is difficult at best. All manner of things can induce feeding issues.
First check this:
fredj338 said:
Check your OAL. It looks like the gun is not in battery, tells me maybe the round is too long.? Many try to load by lyman data & misread the oal of 1.269", but that is apsaami max, not what works in every gun.
If the gun only does that when one of these cartridges is loaded,
STOP. There are a couple dangerous situations going on.
If the gun is like that all the time...go suss it out with the guys in S&W Semi-Autos. Something's majorly wrong. The guide rod should be flush with the slide, and the rear of the slide should be at least
close to level with the rear of the frame.
RE: the load.
According to Lyman's 50th, 5.5 gr of Unique is their starting load for a lead 225-gr, with a listed velocity of 695 fps. That's sort of borderline. I would expect that load and equivalent (~4.0 of Bullseye) to function in my 1911, for instance, but that simply wouldn't work in a stock-spring'd G30. Actually, it would fail to cycle about 30% of the time.
I'd consider the 750 fps to be velocity to shoot for with the 230-grain LRN in .45 ACP for general reliability. Another .3-.5 grains should do the trick, if the charge weight is the issue. If it doesn't, I would look elsewhere. I hesitate to say exactly what because I'm not there to see
how exactly it's failing to cycle.
Generally-speaking, I've found that small autos are less tolerant of light loads than full-size pistols. I'm also hesitant to start playing with springs because small, light guns have heavy recoil springs for a reason: to prevent the slide from battering and cracking the frame to death.