Hello all, here is today's article posted on TheArmoryLife.com. It is titled Suppressing the XD-M Elite Tactical OSP and can be found at https://www.thearmorylife.com/suppressing-the-xd-m-elite-tactical-osp/.
Did the pistol seem to have an excessive amount of recoil? If there was excessive back pressure there would also be excessive recoil. The weight of the can on the firearm would limit the amount of muzzle rise but you would still feel the recoil response pushing back into your hand.i was recently at the range with my brother in law who had this same setup (xdm elite 9mm and Silencer company omega 9 k). the weapon kept trying to double feed, looked like a stovepipe but it was a live round followed by another elevated half way out of mag. this malfunction would happen 3-4 times a mag. we did try a different mag, same results. we did not take the can off (idk why), but seems like it was too much pressure. anyone have ideas?
Did the pistol seem to have an excessive amount of recoil? If there was excessive back pressure there would also be excessive recoil. The weight of the can on the firearm would limit the amount of muzzle rise but you would still feel the recoil response pushing back into your hand.
I'd advise taking the can off and also trying some different ammo to rule out ammo or the can.
A heavier round like 147gr works best in most suppressed 9mm
I don't have a suppressor, but I have considered getting one and read up on it, and I see no discussion of the decoupler/piston on the can....i was recently at the range with my brother in law who had this same setup (xdm elite 9mm and Silencer company omega 9 k). the weapon kept trying to double feed, looked like a stovepipe but it was a live round followed by another elevated half way out of mag. this malfunction would happen 3-4 times a mag. we did try a different mag, same results. we did not take the can off (idk why), but seems like it was too much pressure. anyone have ideas?
I shoot with pistol cans and you are right about needing a booster spring for non fixed barrel firearms. I'm not aware of any way to adjust or tune the piston spring in a suppressor though.I don't have a suppressor, but I have considered getting one and read up on it, and I see no discussion of the decoupler/piston on the can....
The mass of the can affects the recoil and slide cycling, force equals mass times acceleration. You increase the mass significantly with a can but use the same force to cycle the slide, that means less acceleration, i.e. you slide moves slower.
Pistol suppressors are suppose to have a decoupler/piston that is a sleeve with a spring, this decouples the mass of the suppressor from the barrel locked to the slide, so that the impulse from firing gets the slide and barrel locked to it moving, but the can stays still and slides on the sleeve and spring, to be pulled back in place after the slide cycles.
I "think" these pistons sometimes need adjustment/tuning to get the operation right. At least they appear to be adjustable in the ones I have looked at....
So, did the can on your brothers in law pistol have a piston/decoupler? And did you try adjusting it to fix the feed issues, that may be caused by the acceleration and speed of the slide changed by the Can?
According to the Parts Diagram for my Vortex Viper for the Springfield OSP models they use two screws of #6-48x1/4".By the recommendation of this article, I bought the Sightmark Mini Shot M-Spec, and also the mounting plate XD5071 as indicated in the article. But the size of the screws with the Mini Shot M-Spec do not match the female receiver holes on the mounting plate. I have called Springfield to ask for the specs of the mounting plate, and the customer service rep was unable to provide the specs (though she has sent me a packet of screws for their Vortex red dot product, which match the mounting plate). Anyone here know the screw specs that will allow me to mount the Mini Shot M-Spec to the XD5071 mounting plate?
Booster, that was the name I was searching for and couldn't remember. But I've seen it also called a Piston, and it does act like a decoupler.I shoot with pistol cans and you are right about needing a booster spring for non fixed barrel firearms. I'm not aware of any way to adjust or tune the piston spring in a suppressor though.
Some suppressors may only come with a fixed barrel spacer and not a spring booster needed for shooting non fixed barrel pistols. Typically most suppressor manufactures will at least off the option for a spring booster.
The booster & piston spring is installed by removing the bottom cap of the suppressor that threads onto the barrel of the firearm and inserted then the bottom cap is threaded back in place.According to the Parts Diagram for my Vortex Viper for the Springfield OSP models they use two screws of #6-48x1/4".
I think I got 5/16" screws in the box, that are for mounting it on the picitanny rail adapter it comes with, I had to file the screws down a small amount so they did not go through the mounting plate and hit the side below it.
I have a Vortex Viper on my SA XD-M Elite Tactical 9mm, using the SA mounting plate.
Ace Hardware stores have gun screws, I have been able to figure out the threads and find replacement screws there for my various pistol/red dot combinations. In the case with the gun screws is a plate with female holes for working with gun screws, I buy one of those as well. So when I cut or file down the screws, I screw them into the plate, after its cut to the right length, you unscrew it. The nut threads will clean up the screw threads on the cut end of the screw, so that it will screw into the mounting plate properly. If you cut a screw, the threads are often a mess at the cut, and won't screw into the nut/mount plate, get cross threaded, etc.... ...so you definitely want to get a nut or one of those plates if you need to cut or file down the screw...
Booster, that was the name I was searching for and couldn't remember. But I've seen it also called a Piston, and it does act like a decoupler.
Yea, looking at the photos, it appeared the Booster/Decoupler has a collar screwed down on it to retain the spring, it "appeared" to me, that it could be screwed down more/less to increase/decrease spring tension. But that was my guess from a photo, and never actually holding and playing with one; perhaps its just assembled that way with no way of adjusting at all. If you can't compress/relax the spring at all, then I guess your only option is to get different rate springs and experiment. Perhaps the OP for the feed problems with a can, didn't have a Booster at all the suppressor, that wouldn't be a shocking mistake for a beginner.
I read and see in many of the designs, the first inch or two after the muzzle, the gases are just too hot and moving to fast for the baffles, and all have some sort of hardened steel tube just to protect the can until the gases cool and slow down when it gets to the baffles....The booster & piston spring is installed by removing the bottom cap of the suppressor that threads onto the barrel of the firearm and inserted then the bottom cap is threaded back in place.
If you are using the same suppressor for a fixed barrel firearm you will need to replace the booster & spring with a fixed barrel spacer which is essentially a heavy gauge tube shaped slug that fills the void between the bottom cap and the suppressor baffles.
A bottom cap on some suppressors can also be replaced with a QD mount adapter such as the common tri-lug type for faster attachment though these are mostly used in PDW sized and longer firearms.
The Sight Mark Red Dot looks interesting, I wonder if it will be good value Red Dot like the Vortex Viper/Venoms.
In my experience, the big home improvement stores like Home Depot and Lowes don't have the same variety of fasteners as the smaller hardware specific stores like Ace or True Value. My local Ace has a Fasteners aisle with stacks of divided boxes with all sorts of one off fasteners, they have several boxes of "Gun Screws" that are Blued/Black Oxide, Torx heads and the odd ball fine threads on tiny screws, like 6-48. I doubt you're going to find the 48 threads per inch in the bins of generic #6 screws that are zinc plated and straight edged screw driver..... I'm headed to the hardware store soon.
I wouldn't recommend buying small fasteners from any hardware store as these are usually made of really poor quality steel and can break or strip a lot easier than a fastener supplied by a reputable optics company.In my experience, the big home improvement stores like Home Depot and Lowes don't have the same variety of fasteners as the smaller hardware specific stores like Ace or True Value. My local Ace has a Fasteners aisle with stacks of divided boxes with all sorts of one off fasteners, they have several boxes of "Gun Screws" that are Blued/Black Oxide, Torx heads and the odd ball fine threads on tiny screws, like 6-48. I doubt you're going to find the 48 threads per inch in the bins of generic #6 screws that are zinc plated and straight edged screw driver.
Bring your adapter plate with you, to test the screws in the threads.
Typically the same model of suppressor can come in different thread pitches depending on the manufacturers options.Is this suppressor a direct fit for the thread pitch? On their website it looks like Omega 9K has a different thread pitch than the XDM?
I'm having the same issue with my Springfield XDm Elite and the Obsidian9. I've replaced the piston spring in the Obsidian9 and tried a 20# and a 22# recoil spring (the original recoil spring is 18#). All of these were with 115 grain rounds. So far, no luck. Did your brother-in-law ever come up with a solution?i was recently at the range with my brother in law who had this same setup (xdm elite 9mm and Silencer company omega 9 k). the weapon kept trying to double feed, looked like a stovepipe but it was a live round followed by another elevated half way out of mag. this malfunction would happen 3-4 times a mag. we did try a different mag, same results. we did not take the can off (idk why), but seems like it was too much pressure. anyone have ideas?