I am at wits end trying to understand why my home built AR-15 has begun to often fail to feed (FTF) the next round. This happens about 20% of the time, no matter if it is a C-Products mag, MagPul P-Mag (in either 10 or 20/10 capacity). Two kinds of incidents are happening.
1) With rounds still left in the mag, pull the trigger and a light click only. Pull the charging handle back, and no round in the chamber. Pull charging handle back while simultaneously latching the bolt, and then hit bolt release to pick up the previously non-chambered round. Chambers OK and fires fine.
2) Round jams on it ways into the chamber. The bolt rides up on the case, denting it in one or two places from bolt lugs, just behind case neck. Drop mag, round falls out.
3) I think only once did the gun fail to lock the bolt back on the last round. It normally performs OK in this regard.
The rifle has previously fired hundreds of rounds of factory ammo without incident. It has started this with my reloads. Thinking those loads were too light to reliably operate the gas system and bolt, I kept creeping up in loads, but the FTF keeps happening. Even with 23.6 grains of Vhitavouri N133 behind a 53 grain bullet. Perhaps the N133 (and the Hodgdon H322 which does the same thing) are just too fast burning. But, quite a few others have told me these powders work fine for them. ???
I took the gun apart and found gas leakage at the joint between gas tube and gas block. Normal? The bolt is a mess. Too much lubricant? I can't enjoyable shoot the gun as I can not make it through 5 rounds without having to clear a FTF or jam. Extraction and ejection are 100% reliable. Barrel is 22" long. Distance from front of receiver to gas port is 12-15/16". Gas port diameter .092" with a bit of a loose fit using smooth end of drill bit. Gas block is JP Rifles non-adjustable.
Ideas? Pics below.
Phil

Looks like a fair amount of leakage between gas block and gas tube, shooting gases down top of barrel. That looks like erosion of top of the barrel but it is carbon. I can pick it off.

Note black deposits from gas block/tube leakage.

Note black deposits from gas block/tube leakage.

Gas tube end that fits into bolt carrier.

Young Manufacturing Match bolt.

Young Manufacturing Match bolt.

Young Manufacturing Match bolt.

Young Manufacturing Match bolt.
Phil
1) With rounds still left in the mag, pull the trigger and a light click only. Pull the charging handle back, and no round in the chamber. Pull charging handle back while simultaneously latching the bolt, and then hit bolt release to pick up the previously non-chambered round. Chambers OK and fires fine.
2) Round jams on it ways into the chamber. The bolt rides up on the case, denting it in one or two places from bolt lugs, just behind case neck. Drop mag, round falls out.
3) I think only once did the gun fail to lock the bolt back on the last round. It normally performs OK in this regard.
The rifle has previously fired hundreds of rounds of factory ammo without incident. It has started this with my reloads. Thinking those loads were too light to reliably operate the gas system and bolt, I kept creeping up in loads, but the FTF keeps happening. Even with 23.6 grains of Vhitavouri N133 behind a 53 grain bullet. Perhaps the N133 (and the Hodgdon H322 which does the same thing) are just too fast burning. But, quite a few others have told me these powders work fine for them. ???
I took the gun apart and found gas leakage at the joint between gas tube and gas block. Normal? The bolt is a mess. Too much lubricant? I can't enjoyable shoot the gun as I can not make it through 5 rounds without having to clear a FTF or jam. Extraction and ejection are 100% reliable. Barrel is 22" long. Distance from front of receiver to gas port is 12-15/16". Gas port diameter .092" with a bit of a loose fit using smooth end of drill bit. Gas block is JP Rifles non-adjustable.
Ideas? Pics below.
Phil

Looks like a fair amount of leakage between gas block and gas tube, shooting gases down top of barrel. That looks like erosion of top of the barrel but it is carbon. I can pick it off.

Note black deposits from gas block/tube leakage.

Note black deposits from gas block/tube leakage.

Gas tube end that fits into bolt carrier.

Young Manufacturing Match bolt.

Young Manufacturing Match bolt.

Young Manufacturing Match bolt.

Young Manufacturing Match bolt.
Phil