Earlier this year, I had my 9mm Hi Point carbine out, I think at an HRA shoot.
I love my Hi Point, as most Hi Point owners tend to. I have found it to be very reliable and very accurate, and its affordability is a given. It's actually the only 9mm I own.
Anyway, I was having issues with misfires, which had never happened before. I scratched my head and put it away, then somehow managed to clean and store it without really investigating the problem. I'm guessing I was in a hurry or had my brain turned off. Anyway, into the safe it went with no special attention.
I brought it back out for H&FD a couple of weekends ago. I'd actually forgotten about the misfire issue. Across the day, I ran a couple of hundred rounds through it without issue, but towards the end of the day, the misfires returned. Suddenly, I remembered.
Each time I had a misfire, I would collect and scrutinize the cartridge. All showed either very light or even no firing pin strikes. If I ran the cartridge back through the gun, it tended to fire normally. The failure rate was maybe 20%, two misfires per magazine. I decided that wasn't fun anymore and determined to polish off the tail end of a box of ammo then put the Hi Point away. Oddly, the very last round not only was a misfire, it wouldn't eject! Just stuck to the bolt face and rode in and out like some Chihuahua fuck machine.
Now, if you've owned a Hi Point carbine, you have already realized just how oblivious I was. Again, I must have left my brain in mo other pants. Or I was so distracted by the image of mechanized Chihuahua sex toys that I missed that vital clue.
Last night, I got around to disassembling and cleaning the gun. I paid particular attention to the firing pin, firing pin spring, and firing pin channel. Nothing seemed unusually dirty or obstructed. Then, as I was polishing the firing pin, it suddenly dawned on me that it was about an inch and a half too short! The firing pin had actually broken off of the base, leaving just a nub behind!
For those who don't know, the Hi Point design uses the firing pin as the ejector. When you retract the bolt, the firing pin protrudes through the bolt face about an inch. This is why the whole "failure to eject" thing should have been a dead giveaway.
I called Hi Point this morning, and after two minutes on the phone, my new firing pin (and related parts, they ship the assembly) is on the way. For free! No hassles, no fuss.
But here's the truly remarkable part. Looking back over this, it occurs to me that my little carbine was operating at 80% reliability.
Without.
A.
Firing.
Pin.
