Herzo, I was just thinking the opposite. If the bolt is locking back, isn't it getting enough gas? I'm starting to think you may have been right in the first place...too much gas. I've made bushings for the gas port to restrict gas before for the same reason. Sounds like if he rules out the obvious possibilities,(use original buffer and spring) he'd be better off not using that ammo or letting someone have a look at it. I've never been very good at fixing guns with my keyboard
--Mike
I read his post to say that the bolt was locking back with the Remington ammo. If it stovepipes with the Tul, I'm not certain that it will lock back (short stroking).
The symptom of too much gas that I experienced was a failure to extract the spent cartridge from the chamber. This occurs when the bolt begins to retract before the pressure drops enough for the case to relax and release it's grip on the chamber walls. We are talking mili-seconds here.
Then again, it could be a rough chamber (relatively speaking) that slows the extraction due to the lacquered case.
I would certainly start with a clean gas system and check the size of the gas port. If he has an H-bar, that would be a 20" barrel and the gas port size is different than that required by a 16" carbine. I used to know what those sizes were, but that was 15 years and 2 hard drive crashes ago..
I found this on AR-15's website:
For 5.56mm
Colt's gas port sizes are:
* 10.5" - .093
* 11.5" - .081
* 14.5" - .063
* 16" - .063
Unfortunately, I could not find a number for a 20" barrel.
Also about halfway down on the same
http://www.ar15.com/archive/topic.html?b=3&f=122&t=505773 is a posting by DaJester in which he goes through his procedure for curing shortstroking. One of his points is to run some low pressure ammo through it - specifically Wolf - to see if he can make it happen. I would caution that they are talking about short barrelled AR's here, but the principles apply. Another diagnostic tool that he uses is to put a specific flash hider that effectively increases the barrel length to see if that cures the problem. Unfortunately, an H-Bar does not have a threaded barrel so that would probably not be a choice. I would be hesitant to change the gas port size based on one ammo, unless I had problems with other types also.
It would also be interesting to measure a fired Remington case from each rifle to see if there are significant differences in the chambers.
As a reloader, I might shoot a series of reduced loads using Remington brass to see if I could duplicate the stovepiping. That might tell me if the power of the ammo would be causing the problem.
I have never shot any lacquered ammo in any of my AR's so much of this would be theoretical.