Unittea4eva
Member
- Joined
- Mar 28, 2019
- Messages
- 9
Hope you got a great deal on it.
Since the trigger bar rides against that bowed surface. I would be worried about it bowing out and eventually causing premature failure at the 90 deg angle back into the trigger/ejector housing.
Course you could field strip the gun and see if the trigger bar is following the bow.
Should I be concerned?
Would you keep it or return it?
I bought it for about $350
Done!I would defiantly be concerned. In fact I would take the gun back and ask for my money back.
Done, will be going back tomorrow!I would defiantly be concerned. In fact I would take the gun back and ask for my money back.
Done
That frame is warped and there is no telling what additional problems you will have if you start shooting it like that. A new frame from Glock is $100.00, and replacing the frame is the only way to insure that the gun is safe to shoot..
If it was a private sale I’m not surprised the seller wanted to unload it. If the seller was an LGS, I’m surprised they sold it in that condition. Seriously “if” you can return it for full refund I’d run to undo the deal!
Yea, never again will I, especially if I can't see it in person before purchaseI'd take it back. $350 isn't that great a deal, certainly not worth taking a risk with a warped frame.
A prime example of why I wouldn't pay $200 for a stippled glock.
Done! And yes I was just told this at a gunshowIf you can return it, I would.
To each their own, but I subtract the value of a new frame from a stippled Glock being offered for sale or trade.
The stippling is pretty deep and as it being an online purchase and never seeing the gun until it arrived to my FFL I'd say hindsight I wouldn't have made the purchase. Your work looks nice man! I would like a Glock stippled but I'll just purchase stock and get that done separately.Ive stippled a number of my own Glocks, and have never seen anything like that. Not even sure how it would have happened, unless, as JONWILL mentioned, they used a heat gun on it for some reason.
How deep is the stippling? Other than the heat gun thing, I can't see how they got it hot enough to warp like that.
I have a bunch of Glocks, both stippled and unstippled, and there is no difference between the ones that are, and those that arent.
I have an unstippled 30S, and there is a bit more of a gap at that spot than there is with any of my other Glocks, but its nothing like the one you have.
These three pics are the 30S, a 19 that isnt stippled, and one that I did stipple.
30S
View attachment 833543
unstippled 19
View attachment 833544
stippled 19
View attachment 833545
As far as the stippled guns losing value, so far, I havent found that to be the case with the four or so I did and later sold. I sold a couple on consignment, and I got what I wanted/was expecting out of them, and they sold quickly. The others I traded to a local dealer and I got more for them in the trade that I was expecting, and definitely not less than what an unstippled gun would have brought.
Im not a stippling expert, but I wouldnt consider those I did to be a hack job.
And as easy as it is to fix up a less than stellar job, I wouldnt have a problem picking one up for the right price. As long as thats all that was done to them. Seems a lot of people want to fiddle with the innards too. I like them stock, but if they dont have the RTF2 finish on the frames, I need that extra texture that the stippling gives.