For those interested Ive shot the R-9 with some unique occurences Id like to share. First off, I dont think Im "limpwristing" but if any of these things ring true with that, Id like your feed-back. At 243 pounds im hardly a small guy, and I wear a large size glove, ( are my hands too big?) I feel my grip strength is more than ample. The following are my malfunctions:
Lube issues: when I shot the gun the first time, It was lubed from the factory. Nothing feed except Gold-dots. I only fired one mag of Gold-Dots and that was after everything else failed. After that I ran out of range time. So I left. It should be noted Winchester 147 grain L.E.O. SXTs would NOT feed at all.
I cleaned and lubed the pistol, then lubed with super-lube as per the owners manual instructions and info from the forum here. Then I shot it. this time NOTHING would feed. This includes the famed "Gold-Dots".
I cleaned the pistol again but did not lube it in ANY way. No grease, oil, or anything. I then shot it again. This time it worked very well! even the Winchester 147 grain L.E.O. SXTs would feed! towards the end however, the gun began jamming.
I then cleaned and lubed it with only gun oil, and the first magazine of Gold-Dots ran fine. After that, it went back to jamming. It would appear this gun functions best with NO lubrication of any kind! I know this to be in contrast to manufactures instructions however, Im desperate at this point.
The malfunctions were the typical 3rd or 4th rounds, sometimes it would be the second round. usually they were failure to feeds, with a couple rounds standing straightup in the magazine looking skyward. On a couple occasions, the round would remain in the magazine and the weapon would cycle, however when I thought I had a hang-fire, opening the chamber revealed no round in it with rounds remaining in the magazine. In addition, thier were a couple hangfires with indented primers, but failure of ignition, and on a couple occasions, the magazine would drop out of the weapon despite being fully seated.
Both magazines were used with one being slighty better in performance than the other, however both certainly had thier share of "jams". I dont think my hand bumped the mag release during recoil to jettison the mags and im sure they were fully seated before firing. In addition, the mag catch seems to be rather postive so Ive no idea what that issue is!. Im certain the ammo was o.k. and from good stock as it was testfired in other weapons without fail, AND the Winchesters were approx two years old! Any suggestions?