I've been shooting a lot more with my original kadet lately with the ammo situation, and I've consistently had two problems that have left me scratching my head.
1. a misfire that is remedied with a second strike
2. FTE where the spent casing is actually wedged against the top of the port with a fresh round being forced under it.
#2 appears to be related to one of my magazines, but rarely will manifest itself with other mags.
#1 has me chasing my tail it seems.
At first I just assumed that it was due to a tired hammer or light hammer spring. So I replaced it with a stock sp01 hammer spring, and perhaps the misfires improved slightly. I then polished the firing pin to try to reduce friction as much as I could here. I also replaced the pin that retains the barrel to the kadet as I noticed that it was slightly oval. Then I assumed it might be the firing pin spring so I've been slowly reducing the firing pin spring one coil at a time when the misfires occur. Then I assumed that perhaps I had an odd kadet and I needed even more strength in a hammer spring, so I picked up a 22, 24, and 26 lb hammer spring. At this point I noticed that I didn't need to press on the firing pin too hard to get the retaining plate off to clean the firing pin channel, so I've stopped trimming the firing pin spring as I do not want to lose the retaining plate while cycling.
The other day I was running a 22 lb spring and still had some misfires. They seemed to always go off on the second strike. I figured I'd take advantage of this and run tap rack bang drills. As I picked up the "dud" .22's I noticed that the ones that misfire had NO firing pin strike. This was quite odd as I was running a 22 lb hammer spring and a pretty weak firing pin spring at this point.
So I began running drills out of the holster with one shot, and then a subsequent shot. Before the second shot I began looking at the position of the kadet "slide," and I noticed that when I was getting a misfire the kadet wasn't completely in battery, it was oh so slightly out of battery. This makes a lot of sense as if not completely in battery, the hammer would strike and force the kadet slide forward, but wouldn't impart much if any force to the cartridge. Being at the range without any tools I lubricated the slide and the portion of the slide that recocks the hammer to try to keep the velocity of the slide as high as possible to get the slide back into battery consistently. This seemed to reduce the chance of misfires.
Back home, I noticed that when the slide returns to battery that there is a slight amount of resistance at the last moment of the slide closing. I can see the extractor move slightly at this stage. The extractor moves freely without binding normally.
This seems to leave me two options.
1. lighten/shorten the extractor spring
2. reshape the extractor slightly so that it's not imparting the spring force on the barrel when the slide closes.
Before I do either of these can anyone check on their kadet if the extractor moves at all when the slide closes?