Great tutorial, it’s a reminder, when you buy a new Glock to polish every metal to metal component. I love doing it and it dirty parts can be wiped of with a cloth and it will look like chrome again. Years ago I used to polish my slide release, it comes out chrome looking and the pins that hold the pistol together. You can polish every metal part, even the springs.
Did this to my 23c gen3 but also installed a 3.5lb ghost trigger. Night and day difference in pull smoothness, weight and on the shorter reset. Have had it loaded for over 10 years. No malfunctions, accidental discharges or any ill effects. Ive only replaced the shell extractor so far. At least 5k rounds through it.
This is an excellent video. There’s another video that pops up ahead of this one when you search 25 cent glock trigger job and the dude doesn’t even polish half of the mating surfaces and instead polishes random spots. He even polished the wrong end of the safety plunger that goes against the spring inside of the slide as opposed to the side you show that actually interfaces with the trigger bar. I know these videos take way more work than it appears, so I appreciate you taking the time to do this.
I’ve done this to my 3 Glocks. The trigger bar and connector look brilliant, but I don’t notice any difference in the trigger pull. However, if it’s a weekend and the only thing on tv is the WNBA, yeah go for it. I consider it regular maintenance on a firearm, but not that necessary. I know many of you are detail oriented, engineering types who are fussy about such things. If this makes you happy, I am all for it.
I have found that diamond polishing paste works really well. It's available in a lot of different grits up to 200,000 and you can get an absolutely amazing finish
Awesome trigger job, did it just like you did, did three Glocks with it I love how it worked, made my Gem 5 G17 trigger like butter, did my Gen4 G26 and the reset is perfect, even my Gen 2 G17 trigger smooth out, even more, Love it, thanks for putting it out. Chreers
That's means one does not replace anything and without compromising your Glocks dependibility u get an amazing trigger . Am I right?. I don't want to put after market parts in my Glock.
Yes, that is correct. It simulates the natural wear of a few thousand rounds through a finely broke in glock. It also makes your internals VERY easy to clean carbon off of.
Just did a polish job on my brand new, unfired , Glock’s trigger parts. It now brakes at actual 3.5 pounds. It was so heavy before I started that it bottomed out my 4.5 pound scale and kept pulling so I don’t know how heavy it was to begin with. I would have to say it was around 5.5 pounds to start with if I had to guess.
Great video. Polished everything as described. And got down to 3.8 lb trigger pull as well as nice gliding slide. Before it sounded crunchy. Saved me 200.00!
I guess it's about time I did this to my pre awb glock 20 gen 2. Took that out when we had relatives from overseas visiting and I realized just how badly the trigger compares with just about anything else, well maybe not compared to an hk usp.
Exactly , thanks man. I purposely avoided any mods or shaping work that hs a chance of compromising components. With that being sad I am working on a more advanced video right now for people who want to have their metal contact points even more refined by safely shaping them using a wet stone and a little bit of different polishing methods. Not for beginners but ill be sure to explained the risks vs rewards for all mi DIYers out there. I appreciate your support and make sure you subscribe w/ notifications. Not gonna get a ton of bell sounds from me but you don't wanna miss the good videos here and there.
Absolutely I hear ya on that. I will tell you from doing multiple, that it averages about 5 oz off the pull. Not so much, it's much more about having a very smooth grit-free, snag-free trigger pull and reset as well as slide action when racking after you polish your rails as well. Try it out you'll love it.
Just thought I'd add. If your looking to lighten your trigger just get a 3.5# trigger connector, a reduced power safety plunger spring, and a 4.5# trigger spring (no less) on a edc setup.👍
@@yeshua1176 sweet man sounds like a fun one. I'm looking to get a glock 41 soon🤣 it's silly, but I cant help it I want the biggest dog in the yard lol
Awesome tutorial!!! I'm new to firearm ownership myself and it's hard to find good content that explains basic concepts of gunsmithing but you did a phenomenal job! I do have a question though, for parts that come with a coating on them such as my Beretta 92 s Xtreme trigger parts that have the "DLC" (Beretta's proprietary "Diamond Lile Coating") would polishing effect the durability of the finish at all or just make it shiny? I really want to polish the short reset trigger bar before I install it just because I'll be doing the rest of the internals at the same time but I don't want to compromise the DLC finish. I don't THINK it would but I'd rather ask and be called an idoit than do it, screw it up and be called an idoit😄
Thanks for the support. Youll be okay with the DLC coating. It can be harmed w sandpaper or if you run your dremel dry or too fast. A burn can occur. It's easy enough to avoid, you can actually feel the heat in the part as youre holding it. If you want to play it safe, just put a micro fiber cloth on a table and skim polish your parts on it by hand. That way you'll definitely be okay but I'd personally dremel away in a ¼ of the time. I just need to stress the importance of running at a low speed and keeping the polish tip and part covered. As soon as you make contact, the polish will turn black and start to evaporate slowly, just keep doing wipe offs and add more polish.
I've worked on quite a few guns over the years doing various things but i have yet to tear into my glock for anything..this will be a big help when i do... Do you have a video on disassembling the glock upper and lower 😉😄 (slide and frame)..
Thank you for a fantastic tutorial, definitely what I was looking for. Beginner question, do you stop when it’s shiny as not to remove too much material?
Belts and dremels used incorrectly can cause issues that could effect you over years with corrosion if not oiled normally. It's better to polish than not to polish so you can have the easy cleanable parts and smoother functions. If you still have concerns about a high value/rare firearm, or have a very high duty dependance you can polish by hand and also use jeweler's rouge. Just keep in mind that some people will tell you false info rather than admitting they aren't fully knowledgeable on the subject. I can't tell you how many "gunsmith" stippled grips I've had to completely re-do. Gunsmiths are generally pretty knowledgeable, but the really good ones will admit they don't know it all. One of the leading experts on glock trigger work is Johnny Glocks and all his parts are polished if that trlls you something. Hope this helps bud. Let me know if you have any other questions 👍
What is the song called for the timelapses? Edit* I shazam apped it and it says its Invisible Starlight by Audrey Morgan. Cool soundtrack and thanks for the video. I cant seem to find an instrumental only version, do you have a link to that?
Nice detective work for real👍it just so happens that she landed a deal with Samsung. So in my samsung video editor it is a file option as just an instrumental. Can't send it or I would.
You can search on amazon for (polishing dremel tips) I recommend getting the ones that have the metal shaft attached. Super cheap for a 50pc kit on amazon. Btw your speed wont necessarily matter when polishing I like to run it almost full speed. Just dont let that bit sit on your part dry. Keep dipping parts/tip in your polish👍
How often do you polish? Having issue with p80 g17 trigger sticking really bad. Can’t pull trigger back an then it’s stays ware I stop pulling. Any videos of reassembling g17
Sounds like it could be related to a blockage or jam in your channel liner or something similar. I don't have any assembly videos cus UA-cam haters, but you typically only have to polish parts once, preferably after a few hundred rounds are broken in. They will be very easy to clean once polished. I do repolish after a few thousand rounds but it's not necessary. Keep hunting though you'll figure it out.
A Chinese lower parts kit might need the trigger pin ground down and polished. I was having this same issue until I took a dremel and removed some material from the trigger pin
@lenzielenski3276 I'm not sure exactly why Mother's and Flitz are the usual go to for a trigger polish. I've heard that they are less abrasive than other polishes. That's a big deal considering you don't want to polish too hard or change any edge geometry on your parts.
@@CycloneGunworks I've polished knife edges to a mirror finish with green compound on a strop (60,000 grit). Then there's gray and white that are even finer..any of which are actually finer than wheel cleaner or metal polish. The right tool for the right job. You can drive a nail with a wrench or turn a screw with a butter knife, but you always look silly doing it.
Had a buddy with a pos px strom (I'm biased lol) who polished his internals & that long ass trigger pull was so inconsistent we would laugh when handing it to shooters who haven't fired it and laugh at their weird expressions trying to figure out when that damn thing would actually go pop lol, seemed to fire randomly on either the short or long side of the pull if that makes sense lol?
Rust will always be a problem until its coated w something. However you can lightly sand and polish away rust but you MUST lube it and keep it lightly oiled as needed. Maintenance is a must w rust
Right on appreciate the response & informative video keep em comin bud lol. Have you ever coated your internals with a more permanent coating? Always been an old ww2 era long gun guy so I just greased those oldies and never had an issue, but it would be nice to coat and forget those small parts permanently but question is would a coating add much thickness to those already small parts & negatively effect operation?
It doesn't take much weight off. About ¼ to ½ of a lb. It's more for the smooth feeling pull and the firearm to function better while everything is reciprocating. Also amazingly easy to clean after polishing.
It could be the bend angle of your connector or an issue with drag in your firing channel. Glock issues are hard to chase without visuals because most of the parts work in accordance to each other so it's like each issue can be from 5 different reasons. I'd do a full dissassembly to check things. On a side note, I run all my weapons with a ghost 3.5# connector, 4.5lb striker spring, reduced plunger spring, and for Gen 4 and prior the high powered trigger return spring as well.
Not saying there's not a way to make it wor, but you would need other Gen. 5/4 parts and be pretty knowledgeable how the glock internals work,. So even if possible, just not worth it.
@@CycloneGunworks can’t find oem gen 3 plunger only gen 5 and the gen 5s go for like 10$ max with the spring I can only can find gen 3 aftermarket custom plungers that are like 20-30$ dollars
@@2047theway it's all those p80s being built. Add some to a watch list for an email reminder. Or if your in a rush grap the apextactical polished rounded one in stock right now for 17.95 👍
@@CycloneGunworks ye I bet but I ain’t tryna mess up my slide or change he anything so ima just keep looking till I find a fairly priced one and Its funny you say cause I actually need the part for a p80 build I’m working on I just have an extra slide and frame and a lower parts kit but no upper so I gotta order a nice upper parts kit or buy individual parts and I chose individual parts personally saves me money and usually like to stick with oem parts or upgraded parts I know are reliable
🤔 to troll or not to troll…? I’ll do a little of both: some cringe-worthy stuff here, repeatedly call an axle shaft a drive shaft! 🤣 ok, jokes aside…some good tips you shared 👍
Anything you can do for a Glock trigger it needs to be done. 30 Years in the running and has been in first place from the first day till this very time as the Worst trigger of any gun on the market. Very long pretravel, spongy, soft mussy break then the long trip back home to reset. I love it when people tell me O I don't mind the factory Glock triggers, I like it. WOW it's your lie tell it anyway you want to. I want get started on the grip angel.
@@wis1024 Many people like the grip angel. Nevertheless I found most start out with a Glock and not other guns like the 1911-2011 style angels that give a much better pointing and sight picture. Being old school has it's down sides.
You can take a micro fiber rag and some gun oil and get the same results, glock parts are already slick and shinny under the metal treatment they're using . Guess this makes it faster though
Great question. Generally only necessary one time to remove the factory carbon and machine marks. Then the components will work smoother but most important. Your gun cleaning labor is minimal after range days because the polished surfaces clean up easier and dont accumulate as much crap either. All around great project everyone should do on every glock.
Hey I’m from Australia 🇦🇺 and I can’t buy those metal parts over here and I would like to buy them if anyone has some that I could buy of them that would be great 👍 I’ll pay the cost for them and shipping and extra
I can tell you first hand it's only a ¼ lighter at the most. (2-4 Oz difference) it's more about the overall feel and also the easy cleaning of carbon when polished.
I own 2 Glocks. Both are very cheaply made and I’m surprised for the $700 I spent on them they are as shitty as they are. Plastic mags, slide rails aren’t polished, the trigger is total ass, the mag release is also garbage. I don’t understand how Glocks aren’t basically at hi point level. Because they are.
Don't forget to polish your frame rails as well.👌
Never tried that . Might do this
@darthskywalker2467 takes 2 sec on the rails part.👌
Love how u point everything out with punch
Great tutorial, it’s a reminder, when you buy a new Glock to polish every metal to metal component. I love doing it and it dirty parts can be wiped of with a cloth and it will look like chrome again. Years ago I used to polish my slide release, it comes out chrome looking and the pins that hold the pistol together. You can polish every metal part, even the springs.
Did this to my 23c gen3 but also installed a 3.5lb ghost trigger. Night and day difference in pull smoothness, weight and on the shorter reset. Have had it loaded for over 10 years. No malfunctions, accidental discharges or any ill effects. Ive only replaced the shell extractor so far. At least 5k rounds through it.
This is an excellent video. There’s another video that pops up ahead of this one when you search 25 cent glock trigger job and the dude doesn’t even polish half of the mating surfaces and instead polishes random spots. He even polished the wrong end of the safety plunger that goes against the spring inside of the slide as opposed to the side you show that actually interfaces with the trigger bar.
I know these videos take way more work than it appears, so I appreciate you taking the time to do this.
Thanks you a bunch. I appreciate the support.
Agreed sir
Thank you for taking the time to do this. Very informative and the end result when I followed your instructions was top shelf. Amazing!
Thank you, so very glad to hear I helped out another supporter.
I’ve done this to my 3 Glocks. The trigger bar and connector look brilliant, but I don’t notice any difference in the trigger pull. However, if it’s a weekend and the only thing on tv is the WNBA, yeah go for it. I consider it regular maintenance on a firearm, but not that necessary. I know many of you are detail oriented, engineering types who are fussy about such things. If this makes you happy, I am all for it.
I dunno. Caitlin Clark is playing today…
I have found that diamond polishing paste works really well. It's available in a lot of different grits up to 200,000 and you can get an absolutely amazing finish
Yep I also use jeweler's rouge sometimes, just depend how you do your stages.
@@CycloneGunworks I might have to try that next time.
Awesome trigger job, did it just like you did, did three Glocks with it I love how it worked, made my Gem 5 G17 trigger like butter, did my Gen4 G26 and the reset is perfect, even my Gen 2 G17 trigger smooth out, even more, Love it, thanks for putting it out. Chreers
Good stuff man. Makes cleaning a lot easier too
That's means one does not replace anything and without compromising your Glocks dependibility u get an amazing trigger . Am I right?. I don't want to put after market parts in my Glock.
Yes, that is correct. It simulates the natural wear of a few thousand rounds through a finely broke in glock. It also makes your internals VERY easy to clean carbon off of.
Just did a polish job on my brand new, unfired , Glock’s trigger parts. It now brakes at actual 3.5 pounds. It was so heavy before I started that it bottomed out my 4.5 pound scale and kept pulling so I don’t know how heavy it was to begin with. I would have to say it was around 5.5 pounds to start with if I had to guess.
Love it, that's awesome. Usually they do start at 5.5
Super well spoken tutorial. I shoot a good bit but don’t really add a bunch of stuff to pistols but I’ve been thinking about doing this
Thank you for the compliment bud
This video is amazing. Thank you. I needed exactly this while building my first glock.
Great video. Polished everything as described. And got down to 3.8 lb trigger pull as well as nice gliding slide. Before it sounded crunchy. Saved me 200.00!
Now I have to do all my glocks! 😂 figure you’ll save me 1000 bucks!
Nice man. Wait till you go to the range and see how easy it is to clean polished internals. Comes right off with almost no cleaner.
I guess it's about time I did this to my pre awb glock 20 gen 2. Took that out when we had relatives from overseas visiting and I realized just how badly the trigger compares with just about anything else, well maybe not compared to an hk usp.
Nice tutorial. Worked out well. Thanks for taking the time to put this together.
No problem, you're very welcome
Very informational video my guy! If anyones butchers this, it’s because they didn’t pay attention 💯
Exactly , thanks man. I purposely avoided any mods or shaping work that hs a chance of compromising components. With that being sad I am working on a more advanced video right now for people who want to have their metal contact points even more refined by safely shaping them using a wet stone and a little bit of different polishing methods. Not for beginners but ill be sure to explained the risks vs rewards for all mi DIYers out there. I appreciate your support and make sure you subscribe w/ notifications. Not gonna get a ton of bell sounds from me but you don't wanna miss the good videos here and there.
Wish we could see a before and after trigger pull and reset maybe show us on a trigger gauge👍
Absolutely I hear ya on that. I will tell you from doing multiple, that it averages about 5 oz off the pull. Not so much, it's much more about having a very smooth grit-free, snag-free trigger pull and reset as well as slide action when racking after you polish your rails as well. Try it out you'll love it.
Just thought I'd add. If your looking to lighten your trigger just get a 3.5# trigger connector, a reduced power safety plunger spring, and a 4.5# trigger spring (no less) on a edc setup.👍
@@yeshua1176 sweet man sounds like a fun one. I'm looking to get a glock 41 soon🤣 it's silly, but I cant help it I want the biggest dog in the yard lol
I’m looking to get rid of some of the creep in my trigger
@@CycloneGunworkswhat will this do for the trigger pull, and could I just install for Glock 3.5 - connector and that’s it?
Awesome tutorial!!! I'm new to firearm ownership myself and it's hard to find good content that explains basic concepts of gunsmithing but you did a phenomenal job! I do have a question though, for parts that come with a coating on them such as my Beretta 92 s Xtreme trigger parts that have the "DLC" (Beretta's proprietary "Diamond Lile Coating") would polishing effect the durability of the finish at all or just make it shiny? I really want to polish the short reset trigger bar before I install it just because I'll be doing the rest of the internals at the same time but I don't want to compromise the DLC finish. I don't THINK it would but I'd rather ask and be called an idoit than do it, screw it up and be called an idoit😄
Thanks for the support. Youll be okay with the DLC coating. It can be harmed w sandpaper or if you run your dremel dry or too fast. A burn can occur. It's easy enough to avoid, you can actually feel the heat in the part as youre holding it. If you want to play it safe, just put a micro fiber cloth on a table and skim polish your parts on it by hand. That way you'll definitely be okay but I'd personally dremel away in a ¼ of the time. I just need to stress the importance of running at a low speed and keeping the polish tip and part covered. As soon as you make contact, the polish will turn black and start to evaporate slowly, just keep doing wipe offs and add more polish.
Heads up - DLC is not proprietary
Amazing mirror finish. Great video thanks
Don't forget to remove the STAMPING Mark's from the edge, not the face, of the bird's beak. Very crucial.
Yep less Grit for sure.
I'm going to watch this several times before I try it. I also need a Dremel. Thank you very much!!!!
you can do the same with your hands and a rag, just takes more finesse
I've worked on quite a few guns over the years doing various things but i have yet to tear into my glock for anything..this will be a big help when i do...
Do you have a video on disassembling the glock upper and lower 😉😄 (slide and frame)..
Thank you for a fantastic tutorial, definitely what I was looking for. Beginner question, do you stop when it’s shiny as not to remove too much material?
With mothers mag you won't harm anything. I usually get it to where it looks good and then do one more pass.
How often do you polish the trigger? Is it a once and done or do you redo it after a few hundred rounds
It's really only necessary to do one time or maybe once a year at the most
Gotta look at my newest video best detail yet every step. I have all my best tool links in the description too👍
Seems as though you could also use tooth paste to get maybe a better polishing . tooth paste may be a little more abrasive .
Can this be done using polish and some qtips and elbow grease? Or would you recommend investing in a dremmel?
You can do it with qtips and a microfiber cloth. I'd recommend a dremel always though. They are super handy for all types of uses as well.
Very good video. Thanks
Looks like you use white polish then come back with a black polish? What is that?
It's just the white polish. It immediately turns black when cleaning/polishing something.
Very cool Channel bro! And love the music. Looking forward to more of your videos👍
Thanks. Much appreciated
You see my last few videos? I just put up a a few epic Tutorials in the past month or so with all my tool product links attached in description 👍
I heard that it thins the putter metal and make the inner weaker . So do I polish them or I don’t , I heard it from 2 gun smiths
Belts and dremels used incorrectly can cause issues that could effect you over years with corrosion if not oiled normally. It's better to polish than not to polish so you can have the easy cleanable parts and smoother functions. If you still have concerns about a high value/rare firearm, or have a very high duty dependance you can polish by hand and also use jeweler's rouge. Just keep in mind that some people will tell you false info rather than admitting they aren't fully knowledgeable on the subject. I can't tell you how many "gunsmith" stippled grips I've had to completely re-do. Gunsmiths are generally pretty knowledgeable, but the really good ones will admit they don't know it all. One of the leading experts on glock trigger work is Johnny Glocks and all his parts are polished if that trlls you something. Hope this helps bud. Let me know if you have any other questions 👍
Okay I just bought a new trigger and it came with a polish bar. Do I have to polish anything else ?
All the components mentioned in the vid are recommended 👌
What is the song called for the timelapses? Edit* I shazam apped it and it says its Invisible Starlight by Audrey Morgan. Cool soundtrack and thanks for the video. I cant seem to find an instrumental only version, do you have a link to that?
Nice detective work for real👍it just so happens that she landed a deal with Samsung. So in my samsung video editor it is a file option as just an instrumental. Can't send it or I would.
Where can I find that polishing bit or do you have a part number or brand? Also what rpm roughly do you recommend? Cool videos man keep it up!
You can search on amazon for (polishing dremel tips) I recommend getting the ones that have the metal shaft attached. Super cheap for a 50pc kit on amazon. Btw your speed wont necessarily matter when polishing I like to run it almost full speed. Just dont let that bit sit on your part dry. Keep dipping parts/tip in your polish👍
Gotta look at my newest video best detail yet every step. I have all my best tool links in the description too👍
@@CycloneGunworks where’s the newest video? All I see are stippling videos
How often do you polish?
Having issue with p80 g17 trigger sticking really bad. Can’t pull trigger back an then it’s stays ware I stop pulling. Any videos of reassembling g17
Sounds like it could be related to a blockage or jam in your channel liner or something similar. I don't have any assembly videos cus UA-cam haters, but you typically only have to polish parts once, preferably after a few hundred rounds are broken in. They will be very easy to clean once polished. I do repolish after a few thousand rounds but it's not necessary. Keep hunting though you'll figure it out.
It could be as small as a spring cup being lodged. Wish I could help more.
A Chinese lower parts kit might need the trigger pin ground down and polished. I was having this same issue until I took a dremel and removed some material from the trigger pin
Thank you guys sorry for late reply it’s working well polish job new crucible
@@Dirtyfish_22late reply? Man that was two years ago🤣
Helpful info, thanks
best way to improve your glock's trigger pull is to install a gpt 😊
NICs work, I always go through these steps when first getting any Glock or Glock style pistol.
great work!
Thanks man
Howdy, Brother! Your research, explanation and demonstrations are truly appreciated. Thanks you and Drive_On, Cowboy!! 🤠
Why would anyone use wheel cleaner when you can use actual polishing compound...and make much less of a mess?
@lenzielenski3276 I'm not sure exactly why Mother's and Flitz are the usual go to for a trigger polish. I've heard that they are less abrasive than other polishes. That's a big deal considering you don't want to polish too hard or change any edge geometry on your parts.
@@CycloneGunworks I've polished knife edges to a mirror finish with green compound on a strop (60,000 grit). Then there's gray and white that are even finer..any of which are actually finer than wheel cleaner or metal polish. The right tool for the right job. You can drive a nail with a wrench or turn a screw with a butter knife, but you always look silly doing it.
Will polishing help potential rust develop over time? Do you greasy or just lube those now clean parts?
Had a buddy with a pos px strom (I'm biased lol) who polished his internals & that long ass trigger pull was so inconsistent we would laugh when handing it to shooters who haven't fired it and laugh at their weird expressions trying to figure out when that damn thing would actually go pop lol, seemed to fire randomly on either the short or long side of the pull if that makes sense lol?
Rust will always be a problem until its coated w something. However you can lightly sand and polish away rust but you MUST lube it and keep it lightly oiled as needed. Maintenance is a must w rust
Right on appreciate the response & informative video keep em comin bud lol. Have you ever coated your internals with a more permanent coating? Always been an old ww2 era long gun guy so I just greased those oldies and never had an issue, but it would be nice to coat and forget those small parts permanently but question is would a coating add much thickness to those already small parts & negatively effect operation?
@@Jordan-ql6tm Cerakote clear is always a good one.
I'm gonna share the 💩 outta your channel bud appreciate the info.
Trigger pull readings would be helpfull
It doesn't take much weight off. About ¼ to ½ of a lb. It's more for the smooth feeling pull and the firearm to function better while everything is reciprocating. Also amazingly easy to clean after polishing.
@@CycloneGunworks my new G17 has 8.5 lb pull. Something is wrong. Any ideas why?
It could be the bend angle of your connector or an issue with drag in your firing channel. Glock issues are hard to chase without visuals because most of the parts work in accordance to each other so it's like each issue can be from 5 different reasons. I'd do a full dissassembly to check things. On a side note, I run all my weapons with a ghost 3.5# connector, 4.5lb striker spring, reduced plunger spring, and for Gen 4 and prior the high powered trigger return spring as well.
Right on!
Thanks
Do you recommend polishing the rails on the slide too ?
Definitely the rails on the frame. The slide rails don't need any polishing tho. Just a good cleaning with angled picks, etc.
Great vid thanks
Gen 5 saftey plunger fits in gen 3 ?
No it will not. Pretty inexpensive for a gen 3 plunger though.
Not saying there's not a way to make it wor, but you would need other Gen. 5/4 parts and be pretty knowledgeable how the glock internals work,. So even if possible, just not worth it.
@@CycloneGunworks can’t find oem gen 3 plunger only gen 5 and the gen 5s go for like 10$ max with the spring I can only can find gen 3 aftermarket custom plungers that are like 20-30$ dollars
@@2047theway it's all those p80s being built. Add some to a watch list for an email reminder. Or if your in a rush grap the apextactical polished rounded one in stock right now for 17.95 👍
@@CycloneGunworks ye I bet but I ain’t tryna mess up my slide or change he anything so ima just keep looking till I find a fairly priced one and Its funny you say cause I actually need the part for a p80 build I’m working on I just have an extra slide and frame and a lower parts kit but no upper so I gotta order a nice upper parts kit or buy individual parts and I chose individual parts personally saves me money and usually like to stick with oem parts or upgraded parts I know are reliable
🤔 to troll or not to troll…? I’ll do a little of both: some cringe-worthy stuff here, repeatedly call an axle shaft a drive shaft! 🤣 ok, jokes aside…some good tips you shared 👍
Anything you can do for a Glock trigger it needs to be done. 30 Years in the running and has been in first place from the first day till this very time as the Worst trigger of any gun on the market. Very long pretravel, spongy, soft mussy break then the long trip back home to reset. I love it when people tell me O I don't mind the factory Glock triggers, I like it. WOW it's your lie tell it anyway you want to. I want get started on the grip angel.
Lol i like the grip (angle)
@@wis1024 Many people like the grip angel. Nevertheless I found most start out with a Glock and not other guns like the 1911-2011 style angels that give a much better pointing and sight picture. Being old school has it's down sides.
You can take a micro fiber rag and some gun oil and get the same results, glock parts are already slick and shinny under the metal treatment they're using .
Guess this makes it faster though
well done.
Thank you sir
Nice.
Ty sir
How often will this need to be done? After firing a few hundred rounds the parts are going to get gunked up again.
Great question. Generally only necessary one time to remove the factory carbon and machine marks. Then the components will work smoother but most important. Your gun cleaning labor is minimal after range days because the polished surfaces clean up easier and dont accumulate as much crap either. All around great project everyone should do on every glock.
I was always of the silly notion that FULLY cleaning and relubing ANY firearm after use was correct. Perhaps I have a great deal to learn.
Definitely clean and lube every time
Hey I’m from Australia 🇦🇺 and I can’t buy those metal parts over here and I would like to buy them if anyone has some that I could buy of them that would be great 👍 I’ll pay the cost for them and shipping and extra
Hit me up
Can we get a pull gauge before and after the polish?
I can tell you first hand it's only a ¼ lighter at the most. (2-4 Oz difference) it's more about the overall feel and also the easy cleaning of carbon when polished.
Guys don’t forget to have your girlfriend polish your knob!
Already did 🌭.
Just stay away from that mothers polish lol😄😢 sorry had to say it
This isn’t the original 25 cent trigger job.
Some elevator music would have been nice.
sorry im still trying to figure out how to not get copyright strikes without buying rights
Mmkay level 9000 Jesus Christ
Hope it helps👌
💯🤙🏽
I own 2 Glocks. Both are very cheaply made and I’m surprised for the $700 I spent on them they are as shitty as they are. Plastic mags, slide rails aren’t polished, the trigger is total ass, the mag release is also garbage. I don’t understand how Glocks aren’t basically at hi point level. Because they are.
So essentially you’ve done what 1500 rounds would do to a gun.