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November 1st, 2005, 22:18 | #1 |
Glock 18c cycle problem
I took my metal black slide off to polish it silver. It looks pretty cool. And when I went to put it back on and fire it things went wrong. The first bb shot fine but the blowback was very little :banghead: . So little that it didn't chamber the next round. Can someone shine some light on this for me. I have a metal slide and barrel. It is KWA. But the weird thing is that it came with a plastic recoil spring. :?: Since I bought this used I don't know whats going on. I talked to the person I bought it from on the phone and he said it fired fine just before he shipped it. He is still waiting for me to tell him whats going on. HELP
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August 16th, 2012, 23:10 | #2 |
Having a similar problem with my glock 17, slide, spring and barrel are upgraded.
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Feeble humans. Let us give you, our power. Soon, you'll become unable to resist this, intoxicating power. |
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August 17th, 2012, 02:40 | #3 |
A stronger hammer spring may help you.
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September 12th, 2012, 19:32 | #4 | |
Quote:
Tons of weird things reported by you. The recoil spring (I'm assuming the spring is the one that goes on the "recoil spring guide" that can be easily removed when the slide is taken off) should be metal. AFAIK, there hasn't ever been a plastic spring (unless you meant the guide itself, but even that's rare or non-existent). Since it's a G18C - you probably had to remove the fire mode selector switch and the internals out of the slide to polish it. Check the two nozzle return springs as they get crushed/mangled pretty easily if you're not familiar with working with the system. That could potentially cause your described problems as well. Edit: Whoa. Holy gravedigging. 2005? Seriously?
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Age Verifier - Unionville and Markham. Last edited by mmmken; September 12th, 2012 at 19:34.. |
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December 10th, 2012, 16:14 | #5 | |
Quote:
It seems as if there isn't enough gas entering the nozzle system. It's the only thing I can think of that wouldn't cycle the gun. The plastic spring you speak of (should be metal along with the guide) is there to return the slide to a forward position. If your slide isn't even cycling to the rear it has nothing to do with that spring or guide even if it is plastic. If it is cycling to the rear and not returning to the forward position I would say it was the spring and guide. |
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December 12th, 2012, 04:33 | #6 | |
Quote:
A stiff recoil spring has a lot to do with the travel of the slide to the rear. If the recoil spring is too stiff, it won't recoil as easily as a stock one would. Thus, when the slide begins the cycle, there will be a lot of resistance when it travels backwards. In many occasions, the strong spring will short stroke the gun. You'll also reduce the power of the recoil that you feel because the slide won't travel to the rear as fast as on a stock spring.
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"May you fight with the strength of ten full grown men." |
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December 12th, 2012, 18:33 | #7 |
You bent the slide. Did the exact thing to my kjw glock 32. Easy fix just bend it back. Get a rag to protect the metal, get pliers, put them in the slide, open the pliers with slight force to bend the slide back out again. Done.
EDIT: It may not look bent to the naked eye but even if its .05mm that is still enough to cause the friction you are getting. |
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December 12th, 2012, 18:44 | #8 |
Just throwing this out there - I took took an M9 (not a glock) completely apart, and in the process, wiped off all the lube where the slide would make contact with the gun. I tossed it together to test fire it, and there was so much friction that the slide didn't go back far enough, until I greased it back up.
I'm more referring to the the 2005 post, since the OP probably had to wipe off the lube in order to polish it silver, but having no lube can cause cycling problems in some guns. |
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