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JayPee

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About JayPee

  • Birthday 11/18/1942

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    East Tennessee

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  1. Hello Sir, First of all I understand we are talking about the FEG PJK-9HP single action pistol with the FN/Browning Hi Power operating system in it. I have to plead ignorance to one of your questions - I have never used a variable spring and don't know anything about them. Sorry. And assuming we're talking about the recoil spring, I have used both the standard 17 pound Browning Hi Power spring from Browning Arms, and I have also used the Wolff 18.5 extra power recoil spring for use with higher pressure ammunition (+P, etc.). They all work just fine in my PJK 9HP's. On the removal of the sear lever roll pin, I usually drive it out with the correct pin punch from (looking down on the top of the slide)right to left. You don't need to drive it out all the way, just enough for the sear lever to fall out. I have never seen a FEG Hi Power or Hi Power style pistol with a solid pin in this application. Ya got me on that one. Yes, there is a very good disassembly manual available for $10 plus $2 shipping. You can find ordering instructions at http://www.hipowersandhandguns.com/Disassembly%20Guide.htm. You really can't go wrong with this particular disassembly guide. Its author, Stephen A. Camp passed away in late May, but I am informed that his family will continue sales as long as supplies last. Best wishes and I'm sorry for the tardy reply. I hope this information is helpful. JayPee
  2. JayPee

    S&W 4006

    G-Man, I have owned three Smith M4006's, and was issued one by my employer in 1991. We fired the revolver transition course with it, which consisted of 1,260 rounds fired in two days. The ammo was full-bore WW Ranger LE 165 grain JHP. We would shoot them 300 rounds, wipe them out with rags and CLP, run a bore brush through them, lube them up with CLP and go for another 300 rounds. Nobody in my 14 man block of trainees had the slightest malfunction with any of our M4006's. I have likewise never had a failure to function in any of my privately owned 4006's, either. You cannot find a better .40 caliber pistol. Regrettably I can no longer tolerate the recoil of the .40 and have sold all of mine. jaypee
  3. JayPee

    .40 or 9mm

    The .40 is my all time favorite defensive round, and if I was still in police work I would still be carrying it. But if you're going to shoot any quantity of it to speak of, its recoil is only tolerable in an all steel pistol and its cost is only bearable if someone else is providing the ammo. So all of my auto pistols are now 9mm's. They are thoroughly enjoyable to shoot and my ammo bill doesn't break the bank like the .40 did. Also, bullet technology has advanced sufficiently in the last decade to once again make the 9mm a very good defensive round. I cannot imagine enjoying the .40 in a plastimatic pistol. So unless you are going to get a heavy pistol, I'd avoid it. The advice to shoot it before you buy it is golden. JP
  4. Hey Wayne that's a patent infringement. I hold exclusive rights to the "hour late and dollar short" syndrome. Jerry
  5. JayPee

    Ruger P95

    My pleasure. I almost got to go to Cabela's once back in 1995. I was enroute from California to Iowa on I-80 and was looking forward to stopping in Sydney to visit Cabelas. Well, my darn car broke down just outside town and I spent the day in Sydney's Chevy dealership instead of at Cabelas. So enjoy it enough for both of us, huh? JP
  6. JayPee

    Ruger P95

    The Bersa Thunder 9 Pro is a full size service pistol almost exactly the same size in every dimension as the Smith and Wesson M5906/4006 models. It is a DA/SA and has an alloy frame, steel slide, ambi decocking safety, ambi slide stop, switchable mag release, rail, loaded chamber indicator, and polygonal rifling. In 9mm it holds 17 rounds in the magazine and comes with two mags. It is also made in .40 and .45 calibers, and all three calibers are available in a very well done high capacity compact model. Look up the Walther P88 and you'll recognize the lineage in the Bersa model. Here are a few photos of mine. In the second photo, the stainless pistol is a Smith M5906 shown for a size comparison. I've never paid over $375 out the door for any of my Thunder 9's. My Thunder 9's have all had a round count of 650 rounds or more without a failure of any kind, no matter how hard I tried to create one. I stagger loaded oddball loads, double tapped, tripple tapped and did high speed mag dumps in them, but they just won't hiccup. Here's a photo of the breech face to show you just what a beefy design it is. Look at the size of the extractor, ejector, and loaded chamber indicator, as well as the beefiness of the slide in general. JP
  7. JayPee

    Ruger P95

    I believe you are correct about the P95 being extra sensitive to limp wristing, G-Man. We encountered this with them in our HCP classes. As far as there being any particular advantage to either design, some of us like to have total control over our firearm's firing system, which means a visible hammer and an external safety, be it a decocker or not. I'm that way and don't trust a firing system I don't have total control over. I also keep candles around the house. The one functional advantage of the double action design is that if a round misfires in a survival situation, you can pull the trigger again to try and get it to fire, whereas with the striker fired gun one must rack the slide - one pull is all you get. And if it's your last round, the striker fired gun would eject the round and it would need to be rechambered before another attempt to fire it could be made. But as far as this being a tangible advantage,it really isn't one except in the worst of worst case scenarios involving the unluckiest sono[censored]un on the planet. As far as being a good buy, the Ruger double action guns were darned good pistols for folks on a budget. But since the Bersa Thunder 9 Pro came out, I won't be buying any more Ruger 9mm's. I think the big R has lost it title as the best buy in town to this Argie update of the Walther P88 design. IMHO. Jer
  8. Not long ago I bought a new CZ 85B and couldn't believe my eyes when I saw its PLASTIC recoil spring guide. I felt like I had just bought a Porsche with a plastic hood latch, y'know? It would prolly work OK, but would never be a REAL Porsche. So I went looking for a replacement and found one down in Gladewater, Texas. A fellow down there named Steve Bedair operates Bedair Machine Works LLC and makes a wide variety of stainless steel recoil spring guides and full length guide rods. I bought one for $25 including shipping and it looks as good as the ones on his website, www.guiderod.com. It came in a plastic capsule wrapped in bubble wrap, enclosed in a flat rate shipping box with a nice note from the boss hisself. This is beautiful merchandise, so if you're in the market for such an animal, this gent is worthy of a look see. Nice stuff indeed. Jerry
  9. I have a friend who bought one in 9mm a year or so ago and I fired it quite a bit during the break-in process. I have held and dry fired another one in addition to that. My friend's gun was the most load sensitive pistol I've ever encountered. At 15 yards off the bench we could barely stay on the paper until we tried one particular load, at which time the gun started shooting like a target pistol. This characteristic continued for as long as he had the gun and is a major reason why I wouldn't buy a PX4, along with the reasons below. My friend and I both had trouble mastering the gun in both the target mode and defensive modes and did not consider shootability as its strong suit. It did not feel ergonomically well-developed to either of us. He sold the gun after just a few months. I don't gravitate to polymer pistols, but I will admit they can be good, useful guns and I've fired quite a few of them.. Given those experiences I would prefer an M&P any day over the PX4. Like most Beretta products, I consider it to be overpriced as well. Try to shoot one before you buy. Sorry for the gloom and doom report. My friend and I give all of our pistols a fair try but this one turned us both off. He has since purchased an FNH, a Ruger, and an XD-M and is quite pleased with them all. I've also fired them and like them as well as he does. Hope this helps. Jerry
  10. Well, I went ahead and did some testing and have pretty well concluded that my CZ 85B has a problem with the Fiocchi Extrema 115 grain load's overall cartridge length. I stripped the '85B and kerplunked five examples of each of the other five loads I used in the test into the chamber and all kerplunked in fine and came tumbling out as soon as I turned the barrel muzzle up. So then I reassembled the pistol and chambered one example of each of these five loads and all extracted just fine, including the Fiocchi 124 grain Extrema JHP. So I took two FEG's and an FM 95 outside and repeated this process with the Fiocchi 115 grain load that had frozen the CZ up earlier in the day and they fed and extracted in these guns just fine. So what we have here is a classic example of why a lot of knowledgeable authorities always kerplunk their carry rounds into the stripped chamber before loading them into their carry mags. The traffic I've received on this issue as of now indicates that the CZ line of 9mm pistols has somewhat of a reputation for their 9mm chambers being a bit shorter than others, and the Hornady XTP bullet, although immensely popular, has somewhat of a reputation of causing this kind of problem unless its seating depth is closely matched to one's particular auto pistol. It seems to me that neither the pistol nor the Fiocchi load are defective, they just don't like each other. I think I'll leave it at that for now. JP
  11. I don't know, Wayne. From the replies I'm getting to this post on other forums and from friends, it appears that the CZ has a shorter leade than other guns and that the XTP bullet requires a lot of caution in auto pistols because it is prone to cause this kind of problem. So it appears to be a combination of factors, but I've also had some warnings about the XTP bullet doing this in other guns besides the CZ, so I don't think it's just the gun. Like I said, there are too many other good bullets out there for me to keep using this load. To each his own....One fellow will only own guns that will chamber the XTP, so it definitely has a following. JP
  12. Yesterday I posted a range report on my CZ 85 B in this forum, and in it I quoted the use of the Fiocchi Extrema 115 grain load. I was subsequently contacted by the owner of a CZ 75 compact who said he had had difficulties in his gun with this load contacting the rifling when chambered. He said the rounds would fire off, but could not be extracted if left unfired. He had managed to get one out and found rifling marks on the bullet. I promised him I would chamber one first thing this morning and report back to him........I did so and the round locked my gun up tight. Here is the reply I wrote back to him. (on another forum.) "As promised, I chambered a round of the ammo you mentioned in my CZ 85B this morning and my CZ 85B did exactly the same thing your compact did with the Fiocchi Extrema 9mm 115 grain load - LOCKED THE GUN UP TIGHT. (the ammo is coded 9XTP and XTPHP. I loaded one into the magazine, inserted the mag into the gun with the slide locked back. I released the slide stop and the slide closed normally. However, it was locked up tight and would not come open. I lowered the hammer to the half cock and managed to move the slide back just far enough to remove the slide stop and field strip the gun, which is only about 3/8 inch on this model. The round was stuck tight in the chamber and it took a sharp rap on a plastic cleaning rod with a screwdriver handle to knock the round out of the barrel. Upon examining the round, there were barrel chafe marks on the bullet at the point it begins to slant inwards and the straight part ends. It is visibly seated further into the case than new rounds and I can feel a difference in overall length on a set of calipers between this round and new rounds. So it's obvious that the bullet was driven deeper into the case when it slammed into the leade of the barrel. Here are two photos showing the difference between the subject round in the middle, with a fresh round on each side. The difference in seating depth is quite visible, as is the chafing of the copper jacket. Here it is: Here's another one from a different angle showing the same thing. I fired prolly 20 of these rounds yesterday without incident, but I will not fire any more of them now that I know the gun is pushing the bullets further into the case. They did not demonstrate any excessive recoil, so the bullets apparently weren't reseated deep enough to affect pressures - THIS TIME. I declined to chamber any of these loads in my other 9mm's to test them in other guns because those guns all require full retraction of the slide to disassemble them and if the bullet should lock one of these guns up I'm in a dangerous position in trying to tap the bullet back into the case to get the gun apart. So I really don't know if they are just a problem in the CZ and I don't intend to find out. Thank you immensely for your warning and I hope this answers your question. Jer " So like I said, fellows, I don't know if this is just a problem with CZ pistols, or if it also occurs in other makes of pistols, and I don't intend to find out. Pushing bullets into the case and compressing the powder charge is a good way to blow up a gun, and I will not use any ammunition in which the bullet is pushed further into the case by routine chambering. I'm aware that my rapping on the bullet could have driven the bullet further into the case, but I'm not willing to take that chance. I'm through with this particular load. Wayne, if this is posted in the wrong place, you won't hurt my feelings by moving it. And this is in no way a criticism of CZ pistols.....if you'll read my range report you'll find I hold them in the highest regard. Jer
  13. No it isn't, Wayne. It shares the Colt/Browning locking system and a mag release similar to the 1911, like many other auto pistol designs do, but other than that it is radically different from a 1911. Some believe it is designed after the Browning Hi Power but that is just as wrong. It is a completely original design that is much more complicated than either the 1911 or BHP. The parts diagram will scare you to death. Jerry
  14. OOPS! Here she are. CZ 85B made in 2009. Purchased for $549 to my FFL plus $35 in fees. JP
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