IZH-35M (IJ 35) ammo & accuracy
Posted: Tue Feb 19, 2008 10:40 am
Hi,
New to the forum but I found a lot about the IZH-35M so I decided to post about this.
I've had the IJ-35M since about 1990 and I shot it actively until 1994 when I left for my studies, and sporadically since. My best result was 3rd in the Finnish Championship in the 16-year old series shooting sport pistol which is a national event identical to the ISSF Ladies' sport pistol event.
Total shots fired maybe some 12000.
Now, after my studies and moving to the capital region and subsequently to the UK I haven't been too active but am returning home this spring and plan to pick up the hobby again.
Intended use: ISSF Standard Pistol; Rapid Fire Pistol; national small bore pistol (i.e. the former sport pistol, similar to Center Fire Pistol).
With the gun I've had this persistent problem of finding reliable ammo.
Often when extracting the case if left diagonally in between the slide and the barrel; the gun despite this feeding in a new round. It's always with the "mouth in", i.e. the open end of the case in the gun, never the rim.
As the slide is a couple of mms open the gun won't fire, of course.
The greasier the ammo the worse the problem. Best results I have achieved with Fiocchi ammo; and the worst with Lapua. Eley even feels bad when recoiling so I haven't dared test it extensively.
The gun's been to two gunsmiths in three different stages w/o remedy to the actual problem..
1st time it was to the master Lopponen who sold the gun and he apparently smoothened the chamber which was of little help. Lopponen verified this to be a common fault with these pistols.
Always also the cases will swell. When I say always I mean it: I have not fired any ammo whatsoever that didn't swell. The Lapua cases actually swell over the rim of the case so very badly indeed. The swelling is caused by the feeding ramp so the swelling is the same shape, going around about 1/3 of the case. According to Lopponen, the chamber is too tight (hence the work on the chamber) which causes the case to be extracted too slowly giving it time to swell.
The Fiocchi cases ripped a couple of times the last time ending in a small blast causing the extractor and some smaller ancillaries to fly out. (After that I moved to the UK and haven't fired a shot since.)
So question:
Have you had the same problem? Any remedies to suggest?
One suggestion I got was a new slide spring.
And to more positive notes, users' comments, please:
How accurate have you found the gun to be? Example results in Olympic (rapid fire) pistol; or ISSF Standard Pistol (3x20)?
Best ammo accuracy-wise? Have you tested the gun in a shooting bench? Size of groups?
I read in one of the threads that there was a factory test target supplied with the gun with groups as small as 15mm and the average 18mm (if my memory serves me correct).
Haven't bench tested mine but several times I've scored 50 in the Rapid Fire stage; and once (but just once...) 50 in the precision stage. I believe there to be enough accuracy. All these with Fiocchi ammo.
I read that the current Russian record has been achieved with the IJ-35M. Does anyone know the total result?
I'd be hesitant to spend 1500 euros+ on a new gun; but if the old cannot be fixed it goes.
If it goes then the new gun'll be either the Pardini SP or the Walther SSP. Haven't tried either, though. I know the Pardini to be front-heavy and the grip angle is ridiculous. The new Walther seems to have promise.
I'd consider the Hammerli but it, too, is front-heavy and has quite a sharp recoil. The upside would be that then I could get a .32, as well. Now I still use the old S&W revolver. Good for precision but no front creep on the trigger gives me a hard time in the rapid-fire. It is also heavy as lead, and top and front-heavy.
Other areas of concern are poor trigger pull (suggestions as per Pete Brunelli's site haven't helped, it's still poor and uneven) and the atrocious grip. That, of course, is an easier matter. The main probs are that the grip is too flat: no room for the under palm flesh, and no palm filling at all. And the grip material is bloody slippery.
I like the low weight, the balance (probably only the old Sako Tri-Ace beats it in this regard), and the quick shootability.
Regards,
- Larry
New to the forum but I found a lot about the IZH-35M so I decided to post about this.
I've had the IJ-35M since about 1990 and I shot it actively until 1994 when I left for my studies, and sporadically since. My best result was 3rd in the Finnish Championship in the 16-year old series shooting sport pistol which is a national event identical to the ISSF Ladies' sport pistol event.
Total shots fired maybe some 12000.
Now, after my studies and moving to the capital region and subsequently to the UK I haven't been too active but am returning home this spring and plan to pick up the hobby again.
Intended use: ISSF Standard Pistol; Rapid Fire Pistol; national small bore pistol (i.e. the former sport pistol, similar to Center Fire Pistol).
With the gun I've had this persistent problem of finding reliable ammo.
Often when extracting the case if left diagonally in between the slide and the barrel; the gun despite this feeding in a new round. It's always with the "mouth in", i.e. the open end of the case in the gun, never the rim.
As the slide is a couple of mms open the gun won't fire, of course.
The greasier the ammo the worse the problem. Best results I have achieved with Fiocchi ammo; and the worst with Lapua. Eley even feels bad when recoiling so I haven't dared test it extensively.
The gun's been to two gunsmiths in three different stages w/o remedy to the actual problem..
1st time it was to the master Lopponen who sold the gun and he apparently smoothened the chamber which was of little help. Lopponen verified this to be a common fault with these pistols.
Always also the cases will swell. When I say always I mean it: I have not fired any ammo whatsoever that didn't swell. The Lapua cases actually swell over the rim of the case so very badly indeed. The swelling is caused by the feeding ramp so the swelling is the same shape, going around about 1/3 of the case. According to Lopponen, the chamber is too tight (hence the work on the chamber) which causes the case to be extracted too slowly giving it time to swell.
The Fiocchi cases ripped a couple of times the last time ending in a small blast causing the extractor and some smaller ancillaries to fly out. (After that I moved to the UK and haven't fired a shot since.)
So question:
Have you had the same problem? Any remedies to suggest?
One suggestion I got was a new slide spring.
And to more positive notes, users' comments, please:
How accurate have you found the gun to be? Example results in Olympic (rapid fire) pistol; or ISSF Standard Pistol (3x20)?
Best ammo accuracy-wise? Have you tested the gun in a shooting bench? Size of groups?
I read in one of the threads that there was a factory test target supplied with the gun with groups as small as 15mm and the average 18mm (if my memory serves me correct).
Haven't bench tested mine but several times I've scored 50 in the Rapid Fire stage; and once (but just once...) 50 in the precision stage. I believe there to be enough accuracy. All these with Fiocchi ammo.
I read that the current Russian record has been achieved with the IJ-35M. Does anyone know the total result?
I'd be hesitant to spend 1500 euros+ on a new gun; but if the old cannot be fixed it goes.
If it goes then the new gun'll be either the Pardini SP or the Walther SSP. Haven't tried either, though. I know the Pardini to be front-heavy and the grip angle is ridiculous. The new Walther seems to have promise.
I'd consider the Hammerli but it, too, is front-heavy and has quite a sharp recoil. The upside would be that then I could get a .32, as well. Now I still use the old S&W revolver. Good for precision but no front creep on the trigger gives me a hard time in the rapid-fire. It is also heavy as lead, and top and front-heavy.
Other areas of concern are poor trigger pull (suggestions as per Pete Brunelli's site haven't helped, it's still poor and uneven) and the atrocious grip. That, of course, is an easier matter. The main probs are that the grip is too flat: no room for the under palm flesh, and no palm filling at all. And the grip material is bloody slippery.
I like the low weight, the balance (probably only the old Sako Tri-Ace beats it in this regard), and the quick shootability.
Regards,
- Larry