Could we please get a straight story here ? In the preceding post, you are concerned about factory ammo. But in the original post (quoted) you were concerned about YOUR reloads. So which is it ??
More questions...
Have either gun ever been to a gunsmith or sent back to CZ-USA ?
Where do you get your brass ? Is it 'range pickup' ? Could there possibly be someone on this range shooting 9 Major ?
Do you use a Cartridge Gauge to check your rounds ?
I've never mentioned anything about factory ammo in any of my posts here. This is only an issue I'm having with one gun with my own reloads.....several different loads with several different bullet types.
I did have the slide on this gun machined for an optic by Cajun. It had this problem before the machining was done and still has this problem afterwards. I would have had Cajun look into this while they had it, but when I sent the gun in, I had only tried one type of my reloads (I think the Berry's flat point load) and assumed that there was just something about that particular load that the gun didn't like. It wasn't until I got the gun back, mounted the optic and tried sighting in that I realized that it won't run any of my reloads without issues.
Everything else about both P-09's is bone stock.
Brass is whatever I could find. Some of it was purchased in major retail stores as bulk "once fired" brass. Some was given to me by friends. Some was range brass from a police shooting range. I do look every single case over before loading it into the press and check for defects, case bulge, cracks, etc. Anything that looks questionable gets tossed out.
No, I do not use a gauge. I bought a threaded barrel for one of my Canik SFx guns, so I installed that and have the original SFx barrel on my reloading bench and use it just to make sure that the first few rounds out of the press (once I have the OAL nailed down) will pass the "plunk test" and drop all the way into the chamber and fall back out freely. Once I have a batch loaded, I will sometimes just pick random rounds out and re-check the plunk test, but don't check every round.