Morini CM32M
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Morini CM32M
What's the current status with Morini CM32M for the USA market? Is it obtainable from anyone?
Anyone with experience with that gun?
Anyone with experience with that gun?
the .32 kalamity
Yes, I have some "experience" regarding the Morini CM 32. You bet!
My CM .32 was in for repairs and rebuild over a year.
Then the importer gave up on the CM 32. He offered to take the gun back, and gave me a full refund for the the money I spent 4 years earlier.
An unresistable offer!
My CM .32 was in for repairs and rebuild over a year.
Then the importer gave up on the CM 32. He offered to take the gun back, and gave me a full refund for the the money I spent 4 years earlier.
An unresistable offer!
Kalamities of the CM 32
JLD, you tried to get your hands on a CM 32 back in 2003?
Luckily you did not, and hence saved yourself some worries.
The CM 32 was an attractive gun. but it did not cycle reliablely with any ammo.
The first magazines produced used to get the upper part of the rear wall torn off from the cycling of the slide during recoil.
The new substitute magazines that I received, with new "plastics" followers featuring a different feeding angle, would not accept 5 cartridges, only 4 (!)
The CM 32 did never extract reliably, many "stovepipes" occured.
The bolt that fixes the barrel/slide assembly to the frame constantly looened up during firing, often in less than 10 rounds, no matter how hard it was torqued down (and there was no lock-crew for this bolt).
The front blade was way to high, an the rear sight blade too low. It was not possible to bring the gun to print to center of target with a low 6 o´clock hold (that is about to the 5 ring of the ISSF target).
The firing pin of the CM 32s were prone to break, in less than one thousand rounds. (Dryfiring was not the cause for this).
The CM 32 had a very good trigger (like the CM 22). And its balance would be geat for rapid fire, probably.
Quite a bit of R & D work remains for the CM 32 to become an acceptably reliable gun.
Luckily you did not, and hence saved yourself some worries.
The CM 32 was an attractive gun. but it did not cycle reliablely with any ammo.
The first magazines produced used to get the upper part of the rear wall torn off from the cycling of the slide during recoil.
The new substitute magazines that I received, with new "plastics" followers featuring a different feeding angle, would not accept 5 cartridges, only 4 (!)
The CM 32 did never extract reliably, many "stovepipes" occured.
The bolt that fixes the barrel/slide assembly to the frame constantly looened up during firing, often in less than 10 rounds, no matter how hard it was torqued down (and there was no lock-crew for this bolt).
The front blade was way to high, an the rear sight blade too low. It was not possible to bring the gun to print to center of target with a low 6 o´clock hold (that is about to the 5 ring of the ISSF target).
The firing pin of the CM 32s were prone to break, in less than one thousand rounds. (Dryfiring was not the cause for this).
The CM 32 had a very good trigger (like the CM 22). And its balance would be geat for rapid fire, probably.
Quite a bit of R & D work remains for the CM 32 to become an acceptably reliable gun.
Discussion on CM32
Thank you all very much for your inputs...