Member
| I have a p365 made last Spring, bought it new. Once one mentions ‘reloaded’ ammo bells & whistles go off. I say that even though most I shoot are reloads.
Any gun can potentially have issues with about any ammo, factory or reloads. To give a gun the fair chance, I always field strip then make sure things are clean & lightly lubed before shooting.
I’m more an oil guy than grease, for most applications. I know with a Glock the ‘firing pin channel’ may need to be cleaned or checked at times, not sure how Sig compares.
My P365 has been fine with reloads or factory ammo. |
| |
Oriental Redneck
| quote: Originally posted by kyoung: I traded for a NIB P365 with a manufacture date of 01/08/2019. I took it home and cleaned and took it outside and ran a box of S&B 124grn through it flawlessly, than changed over to my 9mm reloads and started having light primer strikes. The rounds that did not fire went off in my VP9. So is this a break in thing or does the P365 need more break in time? Does it need to be really wet on the rails? I had lubed with some grease, I could put some Lucas gun oil on it. TIA Kevin
quote: Originally posted by sourdough44: I have a p365 made last Spring, bought it new. Once one mentions ‘reloaded’ ammo bells & whistles go off. I say that even though most I shoot are reloads.
Any gun can potentially have issues with about any ammo, factory or reloads. To give a gun the fair chance, I always field strip then make sure things are clean & lightly lubed before shooting.
I’m more an oil guy than grease, for most applications. I know with a Glock the ‘firing pin channel’ may need to be cleaned or checked at times, not sure how Sig compares.
My P365 has been fine with reloads or factory ammo.
Yup, the bold part. I'll say it's the ammo and not the gun. The rounds that didn't go bang in the P365 but went off in the VP9 doesn't really tell you anything about the SIG. They simply went off in the VP9. I've taken my new P365s directly to the range without any pre-cleaning and have never experienced any issues.
Q
|
| |
Prepared for the Worst, Providing the Best
| What's your load data, particularly bullet type, OAL, primer type, and did you check primers for proper seating depth? Have you plunk tested your rounds in the P365 barrel? I've shot a bunch of my reloads through a P365 with no issues, and actually found the gun to be rather tolerant, but the very nature of reloads makes them all different. Unless the gun is choking on factory ammo, too, I'd be looking at how to adjust your load to the gun rather than the other way around. |
| Posts: 8564 | Location: In the Cornfields | Registered: May 25, 2006 |
IP
|
|
With bad intent
| If a gun needs a "break in" period, its a deal breaker for me. Too many times have I heard a company say that to me while I blast another 100.00 through it just to verify it's not really a break in problem. If it needs to be broken in, then do it at the factory and charge me on the back end, just make sure it works when I get it.
________________________________
|
| Posts: 7912 | Location: One step ahead of you | Registered: February 10, 2009 |
IP
|
|