All kidding aside, I own a Glock 17 and found it very quirky. It's very accurate at defensive ranges but regarding your magazine issue, I just start from a closed slide and don't have any problems.
All kidding aside, I own a Glock 17 and found it very quirky. It's very accurate at defensive ranges but regarding your magazine issue, I just start from a closed slide and don't have any problems.
Glock- an Austrian-made krunchenticher consisting of a Tenifer-finished steel slide mated to a synthetic frame with a must-get-used-to trigger. No blued steel or walnut found here, weapon follows the principle of "form following function". Do not clean in dishwasher despite what your S&W revolver buddies tell you.
Glock- an Austrian-made krunchenticher consisting of a Tenifer-finished steel slide mated to a synthetic frame with a must-get-used-to trigger. No blued steel or walnut found here, weapon follows the principle of "form following function". Do not clean in dishwasher despite what your S&W revolver buddies tell you.
Originally, Jeff Cooper coined the term "krunchenticher" to mock DA/SA (aka TDA) autoloaders, which the Glock of course isn't.Glock- an Austrian-made krunchenticher....
This phenomenon is quite common with many different manufactures of semi-automatic pistols. I have had this regularly occur with Beretta's and Sig's as well.
P.S. a shot in the dark guess would be a weak slide release spring or improperly assembled slide release.
Jimmy
IIRC, I put mine together wrong once and had the little spring on the slide release bent up on the wrong side of the pin and it caused "issues" perhaps like you are talking about. Putting it back together correctly solved the problem.
Might be that. It was a long time ago when I just got mine, and I am not really certain now what the ill-effects were that gave it away to me that something was amiss but I DO KNOW that I learned from the experience to be darned careful to get that little spring on the slide release in the right place under the pin instead of slipped over it.
I had to take it apart at the time to change the connector thingy, and simply reassembled it wrong. Hey, I was learning. Still am. Worth looking at perhaps.
When the spring is installed wrong, the lever either stays up, or it flops around with the inertia from recoil and gun handling. The normal ill-effect from either condition is a slide that stops back unexpectedly when the magazine is not empty.
My issued G22 and personal G23 would do the same thing when the magazine was firmly smacked on the base when reloading, especially if the barrel was slightly elevated, 10-15 degrees above parallel to the floor.
UPDATE: After numerous attempts today with loaded magazines, like 20 or 25, could only get the slide to close on it's own once. That was with a forceful slap. Other question is with 1 round in the chamber and a loaded magazine, it FTE both times I loaded it this way. When a full magazine is loaded with none in the chamber to start, it functions fine. So my question is, should Glocks be loaded with full magazine +1 or not?
I'm not quite sure I understand the question but to load I start with a full magazine, insert the mag and "slingshot" the slide to chamber the first one off the top. Remove the mag and top it off, reinsert the mag.