Jeb Stuart
member
Honestly, none of my carry guns had problems with any factory load I tried.
My Ruger SR9c? Never a hiccup.
CZ PCR? Only hangups were from a particular handload wedging into the rifling. No issues with a different cast bullet or any factory load. Imagine it may have trouble with truncated cone, but that's rare enough for 9mm.
S&W 469? That thing would shoot rocks if I could get them into the magazine. Ate absolutely anything. It would just deliver them low and wide.
And I won't own anything I need to trust that won't function with any quality ammunition. Steel case and weird rounds notwithstanding, and I've hardly owned as much as many of you, but anything but a range toy or safe queen needs to function with any brass-cased FMJ I toss in it.
Heck, I have yet to own a .22 pistol that has trouble functioning. Albeit I've hardly tried everything and it may not enjoy it, but they've functioned.
I own a SR9C that has hiccups on cheap light loaded ammo, so what? My Brother has used Cheap ammo that caused his CZ to have a few hiccups, My range buddy has a number of Glocks that have had hiccups, so what? To get a gun will eat any ammo fed it is just total BS. I have a Nano that is now well over 5,000 rounds of flawless shooting with a all kinds of different weights. However, there will be a time I come across a brand of ammo that may choke it. Something loaded really light might do it. If anyone thinks I will get rid of the SR9C, Nano, LC9S, and others simply because they might not feed every ammo must be on Crack. And I can tell you, my brother would not let anyone take away his CZ. You better be on crack to try.
There are no perfect semi's, there are no Perfect Revolvers.
If there is a gun that will feed every ammo perfectly all the time, then for sure there is NO need to practice for a failure. Why waste your time. By the way, I have a Black Hawk that will not take Tula Brass Max, or Steel case ammo. If you think I am going to toss it, then you need to stop smoking what ever it is.