this is what I do,
unpack the pistol, tear it down and clean the factory goop off, soak it down with breakfree clp, let sit over night so the rust protection and lube can soak into all the nooks and crannies, then blow it down with air and wipe clean then next day, then relube all the main contact points again with breakfree clp, then cycle the action 200-500 times, pull the trigger a few hundred times, take a paint stir stick and use it to cycle the magazine spring up and down (which was also covered in clp) about 200 times, load her up and take it to the range.
cycling the action by hand simply does what shooting 500 rounds would do, which is to smooth out the machining marks and cycle the springs, which can often be too stiff from the factory. So far every single new pistol I have done this too has given me years and many rounds of great service. As for breaking in the barrel? just shoot it.
this is for new pistols, used, just get cleaned lubed inspected and shot.
unpack the pistol, tear it down and clean the factory goop off, soak it down with breakfree clp, let sit over night so the rust protection and lube can soak into all the nooks and crannies, then blow it down with air and wipe clean then next day, then relube all the main contact points again with breakfree clp, then cycle the action 200-500 times, pull the trigger a few hundred times, take a paint stir stick and use it to cycle the magazine spring up and down (which was also covered in clp) about 200 times, load her up and take it to the range.
cycling the action by hand simply does what shooting 500 rounds would do, which is to smooth out the machining marks and cycle the springs, which can often be too stiff from the factory. So far every single new pistol I have done this too has given me years and many rounds of great service. As for breaking in the barrel? just shoot it.
this is for new pistols, used, just get cleaned lubed inspected and shot.




















































