Kahr CW 380 one year later/Reliability issues
Hello everyone I've been meaning to post and introduce myself. I have now been carrying a CW 380 for just a little over a year as my EDC. prior to this firearm my carry pistol was a Glock, I decided to get something smaller but wanted to keep the Striker fired pistol style that I like. Being that Glock made their 42 a bit on the large size The CW 380 seemed like the perfect answer to my needs. I did see before buying it that there were certain little finicky things here and thereas I know a lot of the 380s have being so little ( my Lcp runs almost flawless). I guess that's where I get to my point, it feels like just about everything that I seen go wrong on these forums has happened with this gun. That being said it is beautifully manufactured with some of the finest internals I've seen. I had the Bowing of the polymer frame at the bottom and when I looked online it seemed that was fairly common. I also had quite a difficult time with feeding rounds even though I was using the slide release again I saw that that was fairly common on here specially with certain ammunitions. Then one day at the range as I'm shooting I noticed my trigger pin was walking out And does so every two mags, again I turn to the forms and saw that somebody had that problem and ended up having to file the pin down because it was too short and not locking.honestly a lot of these things I could live with but what killed it for me was I lost my trust in the kahr for my EDC. Mostly because of the feeding issue/ reliability . I would like to say I don't mean to bash the gun just would like to put on my experience and hear something from others as well. Like I said the gun was beautifully made and I'd like to possibly buy some others in the future but at this time I had to trade it due to all of the finicky issues.would love to hear others' experiences with reliability even with other models as I did at one point have my eye on the 9 mm. Really hated to get rid of this beautiful little gun but reliability is king with carry would love to hear others' experiences with reliability even with other models as I did at one point have my eye on the 9 mm.I would also add that I didn't have the best experience with their customer service department. Look forward to hearing from everyone
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Defect in CT380 and CW380(?)
I've had similar issues with one of my 3 CT380s. Many of the parts are interchangeable between the CW380 and the CT380 so they may have what I believe is a defect in the CT380 and probably also applies to the CW380. Below is what I sent Kahr on the subject just today.
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Upon inserting a magazine with the striker *reset* then loading a round by racking the slide the striker will be resent by catching on the cocking cam before the next round is loaded by the slide going forward. If at any time a semi-auto firearm has to be cocked or in this case the striker reset before a round can go in the chamber then the firearm has a serious design flaw. Any such firearm should be able to have a magazine inserted and loaded whether or not the hammer or striker is cocked or reset. Racking the slide or firing a round should automatically set the striker or firing pin to the rear once the hammer or striker is reset, in this case by the cocking cam. When you rack the CT380 with the striker forward it will (or should) retract the striker with a click as soon as the cocking cam engages and before the slide moves more than half way forward to load the next round. Any delay in the cocking cam catching the striker before the round being loaded moves more than half way up the breach face will cause such a jam. As a matter of fact I’ve noticed with the 3<sup>rd</sup> CT380TU I have here that the striker does not reset until the slide moves forward about half way into battery and very close to where the rim of the round being loaded would be on its movement up the breach face while being chambered.
That is something that Kahr engineers need to take a look at.
RECOMMENDATION: Since the striker being forward is catching the rim of the round being loaded causing a jam both when initially loading and **several times while firing** a magazine, the Kahr engineers need to look at when the cocking cam engages the striker. The cocking cam engagement with the striker needs to occur *earlier* to retract the striker well before the rim of the round being loaded moves up the breach face on its way into the chamber. A possible solution could be adding a slight amount of additional material to the striker and cocking cam contact points. That would engage and reset the striker earlier during the slide’s movement forward into battery. That would also improve the trigger by slightly shorting the trigger stroke. Of course there isn’t a lot of room between the slide and the frame in the cocking cam and striker area so such a solution may take more to accomplish than just my simple explanation.
In the pictures below is my son's CT380 with a pencil holding it open that did *not jam* during our 200 round break-in range session. Although you can see that even though the slide had been fully retracted and the striker reset, the striker still stays protrude for far too long while the slide is loading the follow-on round. What is a mystery is that this the CT380 that fired over 200 rounds with very few difficulties.
The other picture is a picture of an actual jam *while firing* my daughter's CT380TU that continuously failed to go into battery with the round being loaded hanging up on the protruding striker. That CT380 is presently at Kahr for service. Both firearms were firing the same 100gr .380 ammunition that I have used very often in the past while giving CCW classes. Ammunition used in both CT380s even were coming out of the same boxes. It is some of the best .380 reloads I have ever tried and performs absolutely equal to the same firm's (Freedom Munitions) new ammunition.
http://www.kahrtalk.com/attachment.p...id=14548&stc=1http://www.kahrtalk.com/attachment.p...id=14549&stc=1