jwr
01-22-2010, 02:09 PM
I picked up a CW9 yesterday to augment my Sig P238 and for days when my XD9sc is just a little too thick and heavy to carry.
I field stripped it last night and cleaned and lubed it, and then detail stripped the slide (using the very helpful instructions I found here) and cleaned those parts as well.
I was hesitant to disassemble the slide components but figured I'd hate myself if I got the the range and started having extractor issues or something like that. I'm glad I took the extra time because I found a small metal shaving blocking the hole in the extractor itself. I don't know if it would have caused any problems right away but it was nice to find it and get rid of it. Everything else looked clean and smooth.
Like I said in the title to the post this is my first Kahr. One of the things I almost always do on my new pistols is polish the feed ramp on the barrel. I was ready to do just that when I stripped this CW9 but was very pleasantly surprised to find that it was *already* mirror smooth. Nice!
I took it to the range this afternoon and shot my 200 "break-in" rounds through it. These consisted of two boxes of 124 gr Sellier & Bellot FMJ's, one box of Blazer aluminum cased 124 gr FMJ's, and a box of Monarch brass 115 gr FMJ's. Yep, 200 rounds of cheap stuff.
Not a single failure of any kind. I did about 40 rounds of fast double-taps with no problems (the range doesn't allow rapid fire so I couldn't try that). I loaded "7+1" five or six times to make sure there were no problems there either. I even limp-wristed a few to see what would happen. No troubles at all.
After spending weeks and several hundred rounds getting my P238 tweaked where it feels reliable it was very confidence-inspiring to have this CW9 absolutely trouble-free from the start.
Oh, the gun is also very accurate--more so than me :-)
The trio:
http://i301.photobucket.com/albums/nn69/jerrywrussell/sig-kahr-sa-100.jpg
I field stripped it last night and cleaned and lubed it, and then detail stripped the slide (using the very helpful instructions I found here) and cleaned those parts as well.
I was hesitant to disassemble the slide components but figured I'd hate myself if I got the the range and started having extractor issues or something like that. I'm glad I took the extra time because I found a small metal shaving blocking the hole in the extractor itself. I don't know if it would have caused any problems right away but it was nice to find it and get rid of it. Everything else looked clean and smooth.
Like I said in the title to the post this is my first Kahr. One of the things I almost always do on my new pistols is polish the feed ramp on the barrel. I was ready to do just that when I stripped this CW9 but was very pleasantly surprised to find that it was *already* mirror smooth. Nice!
I took it to the range this afternoon and shot my 200 "break-in" rounds through it. These consisted of two boxes of 124 gr Sellier & Bellot FMJ's, one box of Blazer aluminum cased 124 gr FMJ's, and a box of Monarch brass 115 gr FMJ's. Yep, 200 rounds of cheap stuff.
Not a single failure of any kind. I did about 40 rounds of fast double-taps with no problems (the range doesn't allow rapid fire so I couldn't try that). I loaded "7+1" five or six times to make sure there were no problems there either. I even limp-wristed a few to see what would happen. No troubles at all.
After spending weeks and several hundred rounds getting my P238 tweaked where it feels reliable it was very confidence-inspiring to have this CW9 absolutely trouble-free from the start.
Oh, the gun is also very accurate--more so than me :-)
The trio:
http://i301.photobucket.com/albums/nn69/jerrywrussell/sig-kahr-sa-100.jpg