.... I was considering a mag well, the benefit of a higher grip seems worth it. ...
Can you explain that one a bit more?
.... I was considering a mag well, the benefit of a higher grip seems worth it. ...
Just kidding guys. But when some one makes a statement like " I know Glocks are amazing" I just can't help but laugh. A Glock trigger feels like a staple gun. I know that people can shoot them very well but why handicap yourself?
Don't. I used to be big into tinkering inside them, but after years behind the bench 99% of the Glocks people bring in have been changed out to some exotic race part. Want a lighter trigger pull? Take the mechanical and biological slack (take up) our of the trigger, master the reset, and tada... a lighter crisp trigger awaits.
Extended slide lock levers are a waste, Rack the slide instead. Plus they are not meant to send the slide forward, but to be used to lock it back instead. Rack that thing.
Once I really started using my Glock, I realized how pointless those fancy parts where. Buy ammo and take the money you saved and get a good instructor to walk you though the fundamentals.
Since the "pre-travel", or take-up, is really the bump on the transfer bar pushing down the firing pin safety and making the gun ready to fire, how is it possible to eliminate that?My 19 is completely stock with the exception of an original New York Trigger (not what you get these days). It is a first year production 19 and I can't even begin to guess at the round count through it. I still carry it occasionally and it works as well today as it did in 1988. I can't think of any mods that would improve it today.
My 17 on the other hand is set up as an unlimited gun with ZEV Fuldrum Trigger. The trigger has no pre-travel.
Since the "pre-travel", or take-up, is really the bump on the transfer bar pushing down the firing pin safety and making the gun ready to fire, how is it possible to eliminate that?
If you spend twenty years customizing and repairing and competing with tuned 1911s and S&W revolvers then listening to people talk about how "great" and "perfect" and "amazing" a Glock is, it's pretty hard to keep a straight face. But hey, if you like them then nothing else matters. I'm still going to laugh though.
If you spend twenty years customizing and repairing and competing with tuned 1911s and S&W revolvers then listening to people talk about how "great" and "perfect" and "amazing" a Glock is, it's pretty hard to keep a straight face. But hey, if you like them then nothing else matters. I'm still going to laugh though.