Please critique my diagnosis

Joe Portale

New member
First this is not my gun, it belongs to a friend. Here is the gun and the problem.

Llama Mini-Max stove piping.

Presuming that the cursed limp wrist is not at issue, here is what has been done to try and correct the stove piping:

New extractor, trimmed and tuned, new ejector also tuned (actually I need to see this. I have seen many extractors and ejectors that were beaten instead of tuned)and a heavier recoil spring installed.

My suggestions:

1. Replace the heavier spring with a lighter Wolffe spring. It was stove piping with the stock spring. But with Llamas, you never know about those "factory parts".

2. Lower the ejection port .02" and bevel the lower left corner.

3. Check the extractor tension and the angles on the ejector.

Am I right, wrong and/or did I miss something?
 

C.R.Sam

New member
Stovepiping by leaving empty tween slide and barrel.

Magazine
Magazine catch

Did it function well ? And if so, what was changed ?

Ejector still suspect.

I wouldn't grind on port till all else had failed and likely not then either. Something basic is wrong or it would eject properly with stock port.

Limp ammunition ?

If stovepiping with fresh round.....

Magazine
Ammo

Sam, thinkin hurts
 

James K

Member In Memoriam
I think the basic problem is that it is a Llama. I know other pistols have similar problems, but Llamas seem to have more of them.

With the magazine out (and CAREFULLY), make sure the extractor will extract and hold a live round and not let it fall into the magazine well. This is the easiest test - if it will hold a live round, it will hold an empty case. Failure of the extractor to hold the case so it correctly hits the ejector is the most common cause of stovepiping in that type of pistol.

Jim
 
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