This RIA ejected magazines when new
the magazine latch was either insufficient, or as I now suspect, held the magazine too high. As the slide went forward, the magazine was ejected down! RIA sent me a replacement, this was the old one
Magazines sat in the pistol very low with the replacement mag release. Lots of clearance between bottom of magazine and bottom of grip. Also, I could feel a very distinct bump, bump, as cartridges fed into the chamber. If I reloaded the bullet several times, the bullet was shoved deeper into the case each loading. The bump, bump had to be the bullet hitting the feed ramp, and finally chambering.
Then one day, this happened. The round fired, the magazine and all its contents ejected, and I had a case with a blown case head in the pistol.
Gas pressure venting from the blown cartridge case, went down the magazine, compressed the spring, and also stuffed bullets into the cases below!
The pistol, once I racked the slide, the slide moved freely back and forth. My beautiful replacement coco bolo grips were cracked. The magazine base spring disappeared, and something hit my chin and caused a bruise, something hit the roof over the firing line. Gas release pushed the bullets into unfired rounds in the magazine. Since I had flying springs, bullets, I am glad I always wear glasses! Could have gotten something in the eyeballs. . Something that really helped me was the fact the bottom of the magazine was a piece of plastic and blew out easily. Quick gas release is important to keep pressures from building. If pressure builds, things can get worse. I might not have just cracked my cocobolo grips, but had them blown into my hand.
I field stripped the RIA, wiped everything out, and re-oiled. The slide racked, the hammer fell, the pistol was operable. This pistol is made of 4140 steel, and I am certain had I been firing some WW1 relic, made from un heat treated plain carbon steels, I could have ended up with a bulged or bent slide. But this thing, all I have had to do, is field strip, wipe out the powder residue, reassemble, and it functions. Today's guns are built much better.
At the time, I did not know if it was my reloads or not. I chronographed and targeted the load, and it did not seem excessive. This is the load. A 230 FMJ leaving a five inch barrel at 805 fps.
After wiping and reassembly, I loaded up a different batch of ammunition and shot that. Everything worked. Because I was uncertain about the ammunition, it took time for me to shoot the kaboom batch up, but when I did, it all went bang. Because I was concerned that pressure might be high, or there was something wrong with the powder, I cut my loads by 3 tenths of a grain and shot an ammunition can of it. This reduced load has to be a mild load. I was very careful about my reloading procedures. This load went 715 fps.
And what do you know, before the ammunition can of the reduced load was empty, I got a high pressure round. The primer flowed back into the firing pin hole, the case stayed on the bolt face, and the slide was jammed back.
That was when I decided that while bad reloads were still a could be, bullet set back was something to worry about, and fix. Due to case weight variations, it is fruitless to attempt to weigh pistol rounds. Loaded rounds vary more by four grains, so you are never going to catch a double charge, or an excessive charge, by weight. Fed the same bullet several times and the cartridge OAL lessens. I consider that risky. I purchased an
EGW higher magazine catch and installed it. I still get bullet set back, but overall, not enough to cause a high pressure incident. I still feel a bump-bump as the round feeds, but it is less pronounced than before. Keeping my fingers crossed, but I don’t shoot this pistol as much as I used to.
I am convinced the cartridge hitting the feed ramp/barrel and seating the bullet deep in the case caused my case head blowout. I am of the opinion that a good hard hit deep seated a bullet and the reduced case volume caused pressures to skyrocket. Since then, I am back to the full load of 230 FMJ with 7.8 grains AA#5 and shooting it in other 1911’s. The kaboom had nothing to do with powder deterioration or age. The powder is 1990’s AA#5 and I am making an effort to shoot up the keg as age wise, it is long in the tooth
This pistol also has a very hard recoil, somewhere in the barrel lugh/slide stop geometry, the barrel lug parts from the slide stop early in the pressure drop, which causes high slide speeds at unlock. This is based on the analysis in this thread:
Old School Barrel Fit vs Modern Fit
I have a 1965 Colt 45 acp Kit Gun built by Shockey. Really like the pistol but hate shooting it. Barrel unlocked immediately and slide comes back too fast and t
www.bullseyeforum.net
My RIA eats shock buffs like candy. I believe this also translates to a high slide return. And, this pistol is very hard to shoot well. I have installed very powerful recoil springs, the strongest mainspring I could find, and at the suggestion of
@Steve in Allentown installed a flat bottomed slide stop. The flat bottomed slide stop needed to be fitted, and I could tell the extractor was clocking due to belling in the slide stop notch on the extractor. I don’t think the extractor is clocking now, and the cartridge ejection pattern is more consistent, and the brass does not go as far with a heavy recoil spring, heavy mainspring, and the flat bottomed slide stop.
Rock Island states FMJ only, and they are right, the barrel fouls excessively with lead bullets. I have gone through two bullet grit polishing sessions, and probably a 1000 rounds plus of FMJ, and the tube is brighter. There is still jacket fouling which takes JB Bore past to remove. If I shoot lead, it leads excessively, but less than before.
In comparison, these other bargain basement brands 1911’s have been trouble free and fun to shoot.