Outdoor Life
Related: About this forumManiacJoe
(10,136 posts)gejohnston
(17,502 posts)I have always owned revolvers other than a couple of .22s. When it comes to long guns, let's just say I think Jim Zumbo got a bad rap.
At any rate, bought my first center fire semi auto pistol, new, and found that the magazine springs are extremely stiff.
ManiacJoe
(10,136 posts)Load them and shoot them. The springs will loosen up.
Paladin
(28,921 posts)Sorry, gejohnston, but your agenda is showing. How about explaining yourself?
gejohnston
(17,502 posts)when it comes to handguns. There are a number of practical reasons for this, none of them having to do with politics. One is reliability when the wilderness during Wyoming's arctic like winters.
so this is my first semi-auto pistol purchased new. That also means new magazines with stiffer than shit springs. That is my explanation. I'm not a collector nor a hobbyist, so I don't claim to be and expert.
Paladin
(28,921 posts)Sorry I can't offer any tips on semi-auto magazines. Perhaps some private messages to participants in the Gun Control/RKBA group would be beneficial to you; Lord knows that semi-autos are popular, over there.
Kang Colby
(1,941 posts)Cycle through them a few dozen times at the range....or load them to capacity and let them sit for a few weeks....in a secure manner of course.
A good magazine doesn't need a break in for functional shooting purposes, but doing one of the above will make them easier to load by hand.