Spent a lot of time monkeying with multiple variables on my Glock 20, trying to figure out why it was failing to feed.
95% certain that I have this solved. Shot a little under 50 rounds today in various configurations with no issues. Added the Surefire back on and it jammed three times in under 10 rounds. I intuitively loosened the screw on the light and that seemed to help for a few rounds. Called Surefire, quizzed them, they agreed it was too tight, and told me the torque spec is only 6 in*lb. Previously I had it as tight as I could make it with my fingers plus an ~1/8 turn with a penny.
Gotta set it to 6in*lb with the torque wrench later and run some more rounds through it, but it definitely seems to be a big component of the issue, if not the entire issue.
Figured I might save somebody else some frustration by making this post. Very happy that I no longer have an expensive paper weight!
Good luck!
EDIT: I think that the "Glock Pig Nose" (ie turned up frame tip contacting the slide) is what is keeping the slide from fully going into battery. You can see that the slide rubs the frame over about a half inch length at the tip of the frame. Without the light, the frame "nose" is free to flex over its entire length, back to essentially the trigger guard. With the light, ~90% of the frame "nose" beyond the trigger guard is effectively rigid aluminum. The recoil spring is capable of pushing the unstiffened frame out of the way when returning into battery, but cannot overcome the extra friction from the stiffened frame. I will report back with more information. I'm debating whether I want to sand down the polymer nose, or go to a stronger recoil spring.
95% certain that I have this solved. Shot a little under 50 rounds today in various configurations with no issues. Added the Surefire back on and it jammed three times in under 10 rounds. I intuitively loosened the screw on the light and that seemed to help for a few rounds. Called Surefire, quizzed them, they agreed it was too tight, and told me the torque spec is only 6 in*lb. Previously I had it as tight as I could make it with my fingers plus an ~1/8 turn with a penny.
Gotta set it to 6in*lb with the torque wrench later and run some more rounds through it, but it definitely seems to be a big component of the issue, if not the entire issue.
Figured I might save somebody else some frustration by making this post. Very happy that I no longer have an expensive paper weight!
Good luck!
EDIT: I think that the "Glock Pig Nose" (ie turned up frame tip contacting the slide) is what is keeping the slide from fully going into battery. You can see that the slide rubs the frame over about a half inch length at the tip of the frame. Without the light, the frame "nose" is free to flex over its entire length, back to essentially the trigger guard. With the light, ~90% of the frame "nose" beyond the trigger guard is effectively rigid aluminum. The recoil spring is capable of pushing the unstiffened frame out of the way when returning into battery, but cannot overcome the extra friction from the stiffened frame. I will report back with more information. I'm debating whether I want to sand down the polymer nose, or go to a stronger recoil spring.
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