Crossfire fanatic

| I don't have one. (Yet) I have heard that it is a great shooter for the size.
phil
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| Posts: 2415 | Location: Massachusetts | Registered: November 03, 2003 |  
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The Whack-Job Whisperer

| My SIL purchased a 365XL as her first gun. She had a bit of difficulty, initially, pulling the slide. But after a few hundred rounds through the pistol, it got easier. I think it is just the recoil spring assembly needing to break in. It feels pretty stout, which probably accounts some for the great reliability of that small pistol. Congrats on your new 365XL!  Regards 18DAI
7+1 Rounds of hope and change
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Member
| quote: Originally posted by VictorLouis: I've noted on more than one example (all XL series) that the slides seem to resist being opened/unlocked unlike any other pistol. There's almost an undue level of resistance, then a surprise 'break', where it then opens
My wife and I each have a P365XL that’s a year old (purchased in July 2020 but not sure when manufactured). Neither has that issue or the trigger reset issue that some folks have described. |
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Freethinker

| quote: Originally posted by VictorLouis: There's almost an undue level of resistance, then a surprise 'break', where it then opens
Assuming I understand your description correctly, my P365 exhibits the same sort of resistance and then a sudden release of the slide when it’s pulled to the rear. With other autoloading pistols I’m familiar with, including the P320, pulling the slide slowly as for a “pull check” allows the barrel to unlock and drop down at the rear slowly without the sudden release that I get with the P365. I would say that what you’ve experienced is normal for the P365. I have fired a few less than 300 rounds with my pistol, so don’t know if the unlocking characteristics will change with further use.
► 6.0/94.0
To operate serious weapons in a serious manner. |
| Posts: 48350 | Location: 10,150 Feet Above Sea Level in Colorado | Registered: April 04, 2002 |  
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