Tim Sundles offers some good thoughts about failures to fire. We shoot bulk 22s of various brands, so we get a few. We have had the firing pin rebound springs wear out on a few guns, Mk III Rugers, and 10/22s, and that will cause failures to fire, and slow burns resulting in stuck bullets. Those tiny springs are good to keep on hand if you can keep track of them!
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A 10/22 I've used in multiple Appleseeds would 'eat anything'. Thousands of rounds of near every manufacturer, even the awful Golden Bullet, never a problem.
So imagine my frustration when recently shooting the rifle. Never a failure to fire, but way too many failure to eject. Featuring some Rube Goldberg style messes in the chamber.
More recently I watched a video of a man shooting his recent pawn shop specials all in .22 Many misfires and failure to eject. But not each firearm with the same brand of ammo. A great many comments said it was the ammo. This pointing to a recent drop in quailty in production. That is hard to refute since some brands of ammo produced zero problems while other brands were jam-o-matics.
My brother picked up a brand new store bought 10/22 takedown rifle. Right from the start it had FTFeed and FTFire problems with every brand except CCI Stinger.
Conclusion: it comes down to machining and mfg tolerance. While firearms function as designed right out of the box, parts tolerance may be a skosh this or that. Same with ammo. The aim is to find which ammo works best with which firearm. This fellow may be right, but how often remains a question.
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