Roger from QVO Tactical reviews the Springfield Armory SA-35, a 4-inch 1911-style pistol with classic aesthetics. He notes its brown walnut grips, blue steel finish, and factory iron sights. While the trigger is decent and the brake is appreciated, he finds the reset to be a bit long, attributing it to the gun's old-school design. He also showcases a custom holster designed to match the SA-35's vintage look, featuring adjustable Kydex retention with an old-school leatherette fabric overlay option.
This comparison reviews the Glock 43X MOS, Sig Sauer P365 XL, and standard P365, focusing on their differences in size, capacity, and shootability for concealed carry. The speaker highlights the P365 XL as a top performer due to its trigger and shootability, while acknowledging the Glock 43X's reliability and the standard P365's concealability. Potential issues with Sig's finish and Glock's factory sights are also discussed.
This video clarifies that factory-installed night sights on Glock pistols, particularly the Glock 17 Gen 5 Blue Label configuration, are standard features for certain contracts and programs, not aftermarket modifications. The presenter, demonstrating high expertise, identifies the specific Ameriglo Bold sights as official OEM parts using the Glock armorers catalog.
The Shadow Systems CR920X is presented as a compelling alternative to micro-compact pistols like the Glock 43X, Sig X Macro, and Hellcat Pro. It offers a longer grip for increased capacity (15+1 factory steel magazines) while maintaining a similar footprint to the Glock 43X. The review highlights its aggressive grip texture, recoil reduction ledges, double undercut trigger guard, direct-to-slide optic cut, and quality factory sights. Range performance was flawless across various ammunition types after proper initial cleaning and lubrication.
This comprehensive review provides an expert-level assessment of the Glock 19X after an extensive 15,000-round test. The speaker, a lifetime Glock shooter with deep practical experience, details the pistol's remarkable reliability with stock internals, even with minimal cleaning. Key insights cover the 'X' design's shootability, the effectiveness of factory sights and trigger, and the unique magazine compatibility considerations. The analysis highlights the 19X's standing as one of Glock's most successful modern designs.
This video explains how to achieve co-witnessing with factory iron sights on a Glock 43X (non-MOS) by utilizing a 'combat cut' modification. This specialized milling allows the rear sight dovetail to be placed forward of the optic's glass, providing a lower one-fifth co-witness without needing suppressor-height sights. The GlockStore offers this service as part of their 10-day optics program.
This YouTube video focuses on understanding and utilizing co-witness sights with factory sights on firearms. The creator encourages viewer engagement through comments and provides a link to their broader online presence via Linktree. The video likely aims to educate viewers on a specific aspect of firearm aiming and sight alignment, suggesting a practical or instructional approach to firearm use.
This review of the IWI Masada S compact 9mm handgun, presented by an expert from Military Arms Channel, highlights its comparable size to the Sig Sauer P365XL and its 13-round capacity. The Masada S features an optic-ready slide and reliable performance during live fire, demonstrating good recoil management.
This review of the Glock Gen 5 pistols (Glock 17 and 19) details several upgrades over previous generations. The presenter, Mark from Fit'n Fire, discusses improvements like a flared mag well, front mag well cutout, extended magazine base plates, an orange follower, ambidextrous slide stop lever, beveled front slide, new DLC coating, removal of finger grooves, improved sights, a recessed barrel crown, updated recoil spring assembly, and a refined trigger with a shorter reset. While acknowledging these as improvements, the presenter questions the necessity and timing of some, particularly the sights and triggers, which are common aftermarket upgrade points.
This guide details a simple modification to improve the visibility of the CZ 75 P-01's factory sights. The process involves using a toothpick and fluorescent paint to enhance the front sight post and rear notch. This is a common practice for improving target acquisition, especially in low-light conditions. The speaker, TheYankeeMarshal, demonstrates this technique, highlighting its effectiveness despite the poor quality of the stock sights.
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