Ive heard reports of the slide coating isnt as durable on the USA ones, but i'm sure most of that is hive-mind speculation based on one or two questionable reports.
I was a late comer and mine is a USA made one. I guess the idea of it is a little dissapointing, but if i actually look at the situation its really a moot point. I (we) got a fantastic handgun for below dealer cost, and i doubt that glock would allow quality to suffer regardless of where its made. I'm pleased with my gun. I'll buy from PR again for sure.
Mine is a dark grey color and is very different from my Other Glocks. I have a Gen3 17 and 22 as well as a Gen4 17. My Gen3 17 has been used for a few years and has been holstered thousands of times and shows very little wear. I will keep my USA Glock and see how it stands up against my Gen3. It is already starting out with a small scratch from new, so time will tell. I think this may end up being a bad move for Glock.I read up on it, and apparently the Tennifer process they used to use on the slides violates a bunch of health and safety codes in the states because of the by products it creates, and is thus illegal. The slides are still hardened to the same amount as before, but the coating is slightly different, and can vary wildly on the mix and person running the batch so it can have varying colors across the same models etc.
I read up on it, and apparently the Tennifer process they used to use on the slides violates a bunch of health and safety codes in the states because of the by products it creates, and is thus illegal. The slides are still hardened to the same amount as before, but the coating is slightly different, and can vary wildly on the mix and person running the batch so it can have varying colors across the same models etc.
Has anyone done a shooting comparison between the US and Austrian ones?
All this talk and concern about finish aesthetics is kinda funny. Maybe I'm spending too much time shooting them and not enough admiring them.
Burnaby,
Point taken. What makes a Glock a Glock will remain proven at the range. I'm positive that there will be no difference, regardless of finish or which plant ultimately assembles the infamous pistol.
However, as a student of history, I'm compelled to try and nail down the details. It's fascinating/frustrating how elusive any official details are.
But that doesn't reflect on the overall quality of firearm nor the dealer who is responsible for an awesome price.
I've been seeing this too, with the twist extra that Glock has not used the 'classic' Tenifer process since 2011. So it really doesn't matter if it's an American or Austrian built/assembled pistol. Sign 'o the times.
It's hard to nail down any exact sources. Just trying to piece this together from various reports from Glock Armorers, articles, and forum postings. There's apparently some interesting details on the process itself in Peter Kokalis' Weapons Tests And Evaluations: The Best Of Soldier Of Fortune.
Search on 'tenifer' on glock.com and you'll find a total of zero articles.
Anyone have access to any official press releases? Or is this is in the domain of corporate secrets?
Same here. All 3 mags loads only 9 rounds.
After some research it seems it common problem if you are not holding it right , embarassing but if you dont limp hand it shouldnt do it. Back to the range to try today!
Talk with Clay, pretty sure they'll swap out your mags with some that are properly "pinned".