Yes! The L9A1's are now in stock.
You can order through any local dealer. I will be posting some pics, I'm just trying to find the time to do so.
Thanks,
Which dealers? Cany find any that have them
Yes! The L9A1's are now in stock.
You can order through any local dealer. I will be posting some pics, I'm just trying to find the time to do so.
Thanks,
The A1 model in 9mm works perfect with Geco ammo from Switzerland with deeper cut on the rim. Target Sport Canada is the only dealer that offers Geco. Nothing else works in it, FTE all the time, I have tested all brands including the reloads. The A1 in 40 works fine with all types of ammo, I have field tested that one too.
If you are buying one, I suggest go for the 40.
Pure awesome. Ready to ####e on NS, but then get schooled. Awesome.
I am sorry "critter928" but you are wrong:
... and they were in error. The "Steyr proprietary rail" was on the Ms only, not the M-A1s. It looked like this ("ghostie" also clarified with a photo):
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Yes, they do. If you go for manuals at Steyr.com you'll see this for the M-A1s:
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They did when I bought it, not anymore after this case.
Look better. At Wanstalls, for instance:
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No offense but ...
Now, thanking everybody who posted on this thread, see this older one as well:
http://www.canadiangunnutz.com/forum/showthread.php?716606-Newest-Generation-Steyr-M-A1
Conclusion:
The Steyr M9 A1s North Sylva imported into Canada were at the latest manufactured in 2008. Some of them had FTE issues. It shouldn't be the job of the owner of a BRAND NEW gun to run from the importer to Steyr in USA, in Austria, on Mars, spend time and money to fix it. At the worst, the warranty owner (in this case North Sylva) should fix it, at the best they could have PREVENTIVELY retrofit extractors and springs for the whole batch.
As for the rail, measurements presented above speak quite clearly. I saw that I could have worked a little with a file on the rail to adapt that particular Streamlight; but would anyone guarantee that any other Picatinny device would fit in the future?
It is such a shame, because this is a real sweet gun. In my case, I bought afterwards a H&K P30L V1 (sure, almost double in price) which, simply put, deserves more than the AWESOME adjective.
Let's hope the new L9-A1 batch is better.
I believe I can help you with this. The original M9 is not the M9A1. It is a dark blue colour, not gray like the M9A1, and it has a rail which is a pretty "wacko" proprietary thing with rectangle shaped indentations that the light clips into (try finding the light to fit that now... collector's item). These were made from about 1999-2003. The MA1's were made from about 2004-2008. Then they were not made for the better part of a couple years, and then in 2010 Steyr came out with the redesigned MA1's with a new trigger and extractor. The hallmark of these new guns is the left-right roll pin under the rear sight, and "W" as the middle letter in the 3-digit date code. We have yet to see these in Canada. The old blue ones (like below) there are some of these in Canada but they always have some kind of threaded or extended barrel, as they are from after the prohib cut-off and too short for our laws. The 2004-2008 ones are what you always see. Hopefully we will see the new ones at some point.
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BT guide rods makes a steel guide rod for the L9A1,...Mine should be here this week. I tuned the ejector so the brass does not end up in your face, and the mags drop free.
BT guide rods makes a steel guide rod for the L9A1,...Mine should be here this week. I tuned the ejector so the brass does not end up in your face, and the mags drop free.
Maurice, can you describe how you tuned the ejector? ie. which areas you filed/polished to accomplish this? Thanks.
A few months ago I bought a brand new Steyr M9 A1. It looked nice, impressive ergonomics, trigger OK but when I started to shoot ...it was failing to eject like crazy, especially with 115 gr ammo. I followed the dealer advice and ran more rounds through it to break it in; the same, maybe even worse. At the same time I was not able to install a Streamlight laser / flashlight on it (which had been installed perfectly on other brands). I measured the Picatinny rail and ...
it was completely out of specs.
I took the gun to North Sylva under warranty, with very detailed explanations, photos and measurements. They didn't do ANYTHING.For the FTE problem they said they couldn't reproduce it, although I had given them many photos with empty cases stuck inside. For the Picatinny rail, they came up with the story that, actually, it was not a Picatinny one but a "Steyr proprietary rail". As all Canadian dealers sell the M9 A1s imported by North Sylva as having Picatinny rails, they said the ads were incorrect.
Now, the truth:
1. For FTE, it is well known (research CGN Forum) that North Sylva had imported all M9 A1s from a batch with problems. Some of the guns in this batch (not all) have FTE. For these, the solution is to replace the rail spring and the extractor. I was not the first one with FTE problems, I even knew before buying I could hit a junk, but I took the chance having been informed UPFRONT that North Sylva would replace any faulty parts. However they didn't want to do it.
2. For the rail, the old M9s had indeed a Steyr proprietary rail but the M9 A1s were designed and manufactured with Picatinnys. (Anyway, the rail measurements were even farther away from the so-called Steyr proprietary rail.) It looks like North Sylva doesn't know this and did not even bother to call Steyr for clarifications.
I was lucky to have bought the gun from a very nice and honest dealer: SFRC. They took it back and gave me a full refund.
I am not at all pleased to be obliged to criticise a member of the Canadian firearm business, so I have been reluctant up to now to post this info. However, seeing the enthusiasm many CGN fellows have for the new L9 A1 imported as well by North Sylva (I understand, the 9 mm Steyr handguns look and feel special) I don’t think it would be fair towards them to keep all this hidden.![]()
Interested in this as well.
Further, any L9A1 owners experiencing a slide lock failure on an empty magazine?
Yes, and I experienced the same failure on my Glock, too - failure to keep my thumb off the slide stop.