This relates to the Interarms PPK pistols made in Ranger Alabama.
I bought one of these little pistols in the early 1990s. It's been perfectly reliable at the range but there was one little wart that has plagued me over the years.
If you start with the slide forward and try to chamber a round from a full magazine, there is a pronounced tendency for the slide to "catch" on something when the rearward travel is nearly complete. When that happens, if you think the slide has reached full rearward travel and release it, or if you can't pull it back any farther even though you know it's not all the way back, the round jams halfway into the chamber with the slide pinching it in place.
The situation isn't helped by the stiff recoil spring.
It's not a problem with the slide locked back, but there's no external slide lock so you have to put in an empty mag, lock the slide back, drop the mag, put in the full one and rack the slide. It's a hassle if you have an empty mag handy, a problem if you don't.
I finally got to thinking about this and realized that the problem was that the rim of the cartridge is catching on the underside of the slide. I don't know why this never occurred to me before, but that's another story, I guess...
The circle in the picture shows where the rim of the cartridge was catching.
With a fine tooth round file, I carefully removed the metal covered by the red "U" in the second inset photo from the left. Be VERY careful here, you don't want to change the profile of the breechface viewed from the front and you don't need to actually remove much metal. You're just trying to change the "v" shaped ramped depression to a ramped trough that extends all the way to the breechface.
Next I used a fine tooth flat file to break the corner of the breechface. That's the red highlighted area in the rightmost inset.
With 320 grit paper wrapped around an appropriately sized punch, I polished the trough, then wrapped the paper around a flat bit screwdriver and polished the rest of the red highlighted section in the third inset photo from the left and the corner of the breechface highlighted in the rightmost inset photo.
Then I repeated the polishing with 600 grit paper.
When finished, I was able to easily chamber a round starting with the slide closed and a full magazine in the pistol. A pretty major improvement.
This project is best done with the slide detail stripped so you don't get metal filings and sanding dust into the works, but if you are careful about how you hold the slide to keep the bulk of the crud out of the back of the slide, you could probably get away with just blasting it with Gunscrubber, Hornady One Shot, or something similar to blow out any unwanted particles when you're done.
I'm not recommending this as a general procedure, but if you're having a similar problem, the pictures look like your slide, and you are handy with a file, this might be something to try. It's a very minor modification if done properly and shouldn't really hurt anything even if it's not required.
If you're worried about the filing, you could just do the polishing steps without doing any filing. That should help some.
http://thefiringline.com/forums/attachment.php?attachmentid=100471&stc=1&d=1447015659
I bought one of these little pistols in the early 1990s. It's been perfectly reliable at the range but there was one little wart that has plagued me over the years.
If you start with the slide forward and try to chamber a round from a full magazine, there is a pronounced tendency for the slide to "catch" on something when the rearward travel is nearly complete. When that happens, if you think the slide has reached full rearward travel and release it, or if you can't pull it back any farther even though you know it's not all the way back, the round jams halfway into the chamber with the slide pinching it in place.
The situation isn't helped by the stiff recoil spring.
It's not a problem with the slide locked back, but there's no external slide lock so you have to put in an empty mag, lock the slide back, drop the mag, put in the full one and rack the slide. It's a hassle if you have an empty mag handy, a problem if you don't.
I finally got to thinking about this and realized that the problem was that the rim of the cartridge is catching on the underside of the slide. I don't know why this never occurred to me before, but that's another story, I guess...
The circle in the picture shows where the rim of the cartridge was catching.
With a fine tooth round file, I carefully removed the metal covered by the red "U" in the second inset photo from the left. Be VERY careful here, you don't want to change the profile of the breechface viewed from the front and you don't need to actually remove much metal. You're just trying to change the "v" shaped ramped depression to a ramped trough that extends all the way to the breechface.
Next I used a fine tooth flat file to break the corner of the breechface. That's the red highlighted area in the rightmost inset.
With 320 grit paper wrapped around an appropriately sized punch, I polished the trough, then wrapped the paper around a flat bit screwdriver and polished the rest of the red highlighted section in the third inset photo from the left and the corner of the breechface highlighted in the rightmost inset photo.
Then I repeated the polishing with 600 grit paper.
When finished, I was able to easily chamber a round starting with the slide closed and a full magazine in the pistol. A pretty major improvement.
This project is best done with the slide detail stripped so you don't get metal filings and sanding dust into the works, but if you are careful about how you hold the slide to keep the bulk of the crud out of the back of the slide, you could probably get away with just blasting it with Gunscrubber, Hornady One Shot, or something similar to blow out any unwanted particles when you're done.
I'm not recommending this as a general procedure, but if you're having a similar problem, the pictures look like your slide, and you are handy with a file, this might be something to try. It's a very minor modification if done properly and shouldn't really hurt anything even if it's not required.
If you're worried about the filing, you could just do the polishing steps without doing any filing. That should help some.
http://thefiringline.com/forums/attachment.php?attachmentid=100471&stc=1&d=1447015659