-40 Glock

buckloco

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Just a question to the Glock armourers out there.Would the Glock stand up in -40* weather or would you run into problems with the polimer frame.

Thanks.
 
You don't have to worry about you gun working in -40 degree weather, The bad guys don't work when it's that cold outside ! :)
 
Yes,
I've shot my G22 in -40 with downloaded power factor ammo also, and no problems...
Robert

Just out of interest, how long had the gun been out in the cold, was it cold soaked? My experience with things mechanical is that at these temperatures there are few things that work as they should. The other consideration is moving from warm to cold several times. This will ice things up pretty good too.
 
How cold do ice cube trays get?

I've been banging out ice cubes form the same 2 trays for a good decade - I suspect the Glock polymer is more durable ;)
 
How cold do ice cube trays get?

I've been banging out ice cubes form the same 2 trays for a good decade - I suspect the Glock polymer is more durable ;)

Ice cube trays are at -19C. The next 20 degrees are the ones that cause the problems. Also I doubt your ice cube tray has any springs or lubricant in it.
 
I've shot the hell out of a second generation G22, -40 won't hurt it. I've left it in the garage for weeks on end in the cold to test it in cold weather. I've tried it in +40C heat too. I've also thrown it into muck puddles at the range (you should see the look on the face of 1911 shooters.....), slapped mags in it and its fired fine. I've tried limp wristing it in cold weather, packed full of mud, gravel, sand etc and have not expierenced a failure to fire, extract or feed. Apart from a face full of muck when pulling the trigger, nothing much seems to slow it down. Check out some of the Glock torture tests, I've tried some of the same tests and my original G22 passed with flying colours. It was these tests that sold me on the design, and Glock is the only pistol I will trust in a truely brutal situation like heat, cold, mud, sand etc. I've fired 200+ rounds rapid fire in cold weather, hot weather and dunked the gun into a bucket of water when it was steaming hot, them shot it again. Kept on firing. Freeze a Glock in a bucket of water, done it, didn't hurt it.

Aside from making sure the barrel was clear, the rest of the pistol was so packed with mud and much you would swear it wouldn't function. It is truely a great design IMO. As a side note, the tennifer finish held up great, barely any scratches on the slide and the polymer frame was unaffected, apart from the odd ding mark.

I did these tests in 1995, no idea if the third generation Glocks are as tough, but I assume them to be.
 
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I've shot an Inglis high power at -40 and the only thing that sucked was the icicles on my eyelashes and my numb shooting hand. I had no stoppages/problems and shot marksman. I would think the issues of extreme cold would be gummed up lube(no clp), the drop in ammo performance, and ice build up from the heat of the pistol being fired.
 
I remember reading an article a few years back mentioning Alaskan State Troopers had switched to Glock. I'm sure the temperature there gets pretty chilly.
 
Well thanks a lot folks.I heard that our Military was considering using Sig instead of the Brownings we use now and I wondered why they would not suggest Glock considering the reliability and my air force buddy said he thought it might be because of cold weather.Personally if we went with Glock it would make my kit that much lighter.lol
 
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