![]() Just doing this I saw trigger pull drop from 5.25#s new, to 5.0. hand cycle / dry fire it at least 100 times - even 200 before first range session.also disassemble the mags to clean insuring inside mag body inside is bone dry (can use dry lube if you'd like as some recommend - I do)).first thing, clean and lube it to spec, including the striker channel.When I'm asked, I will tell any new 365 owner to first: (and I learned this from others here - thank you) There have also been off-n-on mag issues where the follower lower edge gets caught on the cut out which can be felt (BTW, the new mags come with lube too - inside which needs to be dry). So, with 365s being kind of tight" when new, and then a gunked striker channel, it's no surprise there can be initial issues. What astounds me is that sig does this, but also discourages owners from removing the striker to clean it, and the channel (***?). The shipping "gunk" sig packs into new 365s has been well documented here - I've seen it on every new 365 the family has purchased. Now on my first 100 rounds, I run into this issue. Does anybody have any idea? I have run thousands of rounds through my Glock, and Hellcat (which I sold because I shoot the Sig better) and never had a failure. So, unhelpful customer service aside, I would like to know what may have caused this issue. He told me to run more rounds through it, and if it happens again, I can send it in to get it checked out. No jam, no ejection issues, and the slide went fully forward and ostensibly into battery. But as I mentioned, I already checked for those problems and found none of them. ![]() If it was limp-wristed, the gun would not properly cycle the next round, there would be a jam, or the slide may not be forward all the way which would make it not go fully into battery. If it was under-powered ammo, it would fail to cycle fully. But if it was bad ammo, like a hard primer or something to that effect, the trigger would still have reset and clicked, but it would just not go bang. The customer service rep also said that limp-wristing or bad ammo probably caused it. I was carrying a Glock before for that reason but I love the shootability and concealability of the Sig P365 which is why I wanted to make the change. In my opinion, having full confidence in the firearm's reliability is absolutely a big deal. First, the guy said that 1 issue out of 100 is only a 1 percent fail rate, so not a big deal. I called Sig to see if they know what could cause this, but they were unhelpful. Or it's a recurring issue every other round (in some aftermarket Glock triggers and so on). I've heard about dead triggers before, but generally racking the slide doesn't seem to fix them. I don't understand what caused this issue. I then put the live round back into the mag and it worked fine. The trigger reset and I shot the rest of the mag with no issues. I racked the slide to drop the live round from the chamber and load in the next round. I then tapped the back of the slide to make sure it went fully into battery, but nothing changed. I checked to see if there was a jam, but it had cycled properly. ![]() ![]() After 75 rounds or so, the trigger was dead. I bought a P365 recently, and put 100 rounds through it.
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