Like my thread on a year with the excellent .22 Marvel conversion unit, this will be a thread on my life with an unreliable and difficult Rock River 45 1911 bullseye gun. This story will be on-going until I get the thing satisfactorily fixed.
Installment 1:
I've had this safe queen for a few years now and it's just been unreliable and a hassle to own. I really can't use it in competion because when I shoot, I think more about whether it will feed or eject than anything else. Here's some history:
1) The gun is the now-defunct long-slide 6" barrelled model of the Rock River bullseye gun. Terrific accuracy guarantee (1.5" at 50 yards), but you pay for it by having an ammo-finicky gun that's got some construction hassles that make it difficult to perform routine cleaning on.
2) After going nuts trying to get it to function reliably I gave up and sent it back to Rock River for correction. They said they fired it 350 times and it was perfectly reliable with Federal jacketed match ammo, which is too expensive for me to shoot with. After some experimentation, I found that I could get it reliable by using only Remington brass, and a significantly shorter than normal OAL. I’m using standard bullseye loads using 200 grain cast SWCs and about 4 grains of Bullseye powder.
3) Using a plastic Wilson or Brownells bushing wrench doesn’t work. The wrench breaks. I need to use a metal wrench.
4) A threaded rod runs through the recoil spring. This is a hassle to install and remove, but has an advantage when contemplating the use of a .22 conversion unit like the Marvel. The slide can be removed as a unit, instead of the slide, barrel, spring, and guide being removed and stored separately. For cleaning, however, it’s a nuisance.
To take the top-end apart, you unthread and remove the rod that runs through the recoil spring, then turn the bushing for removal, then tap the chamber end of the barrel with a dowel and plastic mallet to push the bushing out of the slide.
Reinstalling the recoil spring is opposite what you may be used to. The end with the two tight coils goes toward the muzzle instead of toward the chamber. If you put them toward the chamber, then the gun does not function reliably and the slide returns to position slower than it should. Apparently there’s some binding involved. It would have been nice if Rock River had included instructions for performing routine maintenance.
Reinstalling the slide requires the use of a Brownell’s plunger tool. It cannot be reinstalled without such a tool. I called Rock River about this and they said they use a longer-than-standard plunger, but couldn’t explain why, except that it’s because they needed to. I tried a standard length plunger and it still needs the tool for reassembly.
5) Back to ammo. It is absolutely necessary to drop each round into the chamber as part of the reloading process. This means removing the barrel from the gun, taking each finished round, and dropping it into the chamber. Any imperfections like gobs of bullet wax or a long case, or a smear of lead on the case from a bad resizing job will cause the round to fail to chamber.
Currently, I’m in the process of verifying the true reliability of my Remington-brassed rounds, which of course takes a while because only thousands of rounds will prove it to me.
6) What’s a shooter to do? Well, one option on the table is to send it to a good bullseye gunsmith for rework. This seems like a very probable scenario. I really don’t want to increase my handloading time by testing each round, or jumping through hoops for routine maintenance.
I had a bad experience with Clark Custom Guns in the way of customer service and finishing several years ago, but I must give them credit for doing a good job on the gunsmithing. That Clark as been reliable, accurate, and easy to maintain. My opinion of Rock River is that they build the guns but don’t really know what a bullseye shooter needs, so I don’t think I’ll be going back to them either for repairs or for other guns.
7) Next installment is on tuning my ammo construction process to get reliable ammo that doesn’t require chamber testing before use. Is it possible? We’ll have to wait and see.