Tungsten
Ultimate Member
I have had a P95 for a couple years now. Love the thing, but I somehow did something stupid. I disassembled it for a heavy cleaning session. Upon reassembly I forgot to lower the ejector so when I pushed the slide back onto the gun, the camblock was sticking about an inch out in front of the gun. I finally figured out how to get it back apart. So then I reassembled it "correctly." At that point I noticed a few problems:
1. No magazine in gun, on safe, with hammer lowered, I notice when I pull the trigger, I can see the safety lever move slightly upwards toward fire as the trigger is being depressed.
2. No magazine, on safe, I rack the slide. If I ride it forward, it ends up sticking and stopping maybe 1/8" from fully forward. The hammer is now back, and with just slight pressure on the back of the frame, it pops forward the 1/8" and also the hammers falls.
3. It could be my imagination but it feels like the hammer is breaking at a longer pull point on the trigger after reassembly.
Recently I felt some grinding or roughness on the trigger which is why I took it down and gave it a thorough cleaning.
Does this seem like a true malfunction, or something obviously broke that I'm not seeing?
Thanks for the help.
1. No magazine in gun, on safe, with hammer lowered, I notice when I pull the trigger, I can see the safety lever move slightly upwards toward fire as the trigger is being depressed.
2. No magazine, on safe, I rack the slide. If I ride it forward, it ends up sticking and stopping maybe 1/8" from fully forward. The hammer is now back, and with just slight pressure on the back of the frame, it pops forward the 1/8" and also the hammers falls.
3. It could be my imagination but it feels like the hammer is breaking at a longer pull point on the trigger after reassembly.
Recently I felt some grinding or roughness on the trigger which is why I took it down and gave it a thorough cleaning.
Does this seem like a true malfunction, or something obviously broke that I'm not seeing?
Thanks for the help.