Don't forget the two biggest reasons why civilians bought this pistol: Martin Riggs and John McClane. Seriously, I bought my first Beretta in the early '90s simply to have a facsimile of the new military sidearm, but eventually came to realize that it's a darn good handgun just standing on its own merits. It's as accurate and reliable as you're ever going to find in a service pistol, and it's also one of the best-looking guns out there as well. The problems with the military-issue M9s were mostly due to bad magazines and failure to replace recoil springs and locking blocks in a timely manner. If you don't perform proper maintenance any machine will eventually break down.
@@J1Z06 seems like he could definitely take care of himself in the hostile situation and I wouldn't want to be the one opposing him I'd rather him be on our side you know I'm saying
ABSOLUTELY !! He has an EXCELLENT understanding of the background behind WHY decisions were made, and how those decisions and choices have either proven Valid, or been changed, based on experience. Long Live Mas !!!
I actually got a 92F while I was a senior in high school. It was my first pistol. I'll never get rid of it & it still shoots amazingly. Accuracy with it is unreal. Wanted one because of Lethal Weapon and Die Hard
I started out with the 92FS, but this dickhead was in a car in the street threatening me and my family. I still don't know why ? He was parked in my driveway until he noticed I had a pistol. He got off real quick. It was in my belt and never was drawn. He changed tactics and started trying to get a response from me. Not bloody likely. He hit the emergency button on his phone and started telling me that I'm a big tough guy with my pistol. I didn't say a word. I knew what he was doing. I was on my property back leaning on the garage door. I could hear the sirens coming. I never left my property. 20 cops showed up for nothing. They at gunpoint ordered me off my property so I had the pistol. 3 charges # 1 Attempted Murder. Which is funny shit because I am a target shooter and my father managed a shooting range. I was there every time it was open. Trust me if I wanted it would have been Murder. He was 2 carlegenths away, please. Then attempted use of a feallony weapon? That my lawyer said that one is made up. #3 Was use of a deadly weapon on public on the road. They ordered me off at gunpoint. Luckily I had the best Lawyer in Lake County Illinois. He had me released to his custody. I never have been in a jail cell. He got the 3 turned into, " Vehicular Trespassing" ?? I had the same reaction. That's a driving offense. 100.00 plus 1 year of probation. The probation office is so busy they looked at the charge, they asked me if I drink ? I replied no. She shook her head and said, you can come in every 3rd month. She was pissed off because of probation issued for stupid shit. They never drug tested me. Anything in my system was perception. 4 times and I'm done. The judge asked the lawyers what to do with the pistol ? My lawyer asked if it was a family or collectable, I said no so the lawyer said it would cost to much to get it back and I should buy a new one. They stuck it in the evidence room and forgot about it. 11 years later I moved to northern Wisconsin from the Toilet called Illinois. 11 years later I got this letter from Lake County Sheriff Department in Illinois. I thought oh boy here we go again. Turns out that the evidence room was getting full and they did a audit and found my 92. At the time I still have a clean past. The letter said that they are in possession of a Beretta pistol that belongs to me and if I want it returned to contact so and let them know that you want it. I had to have it transferred to a FFL dealer. No problem. 20 bucks and 42 and some change. Now I have that 92FS and a M-9.
When this man speaks, you just know he is giving you the strait truth with no embellishment. An encyclopedia of knowledge and actual practical application.
I’ve relied on them for over 20 years now. Compete with them, carry them. For me, they are ‘the one.’ Folks like Wilson and LTT have given them new life, too. Long live the 92.
I was introduced to the Beretta in the Navy. I bought mine more than 20 years ago and in spite of my nearsightedness, my 92FS is still the most accurate firearm I've used.
I have been following Massad since the mid 80's when I started carrying. I read his article on the Miami FBI fire fight in 1986. I am so glad he's working with Wilson Combat on these videos.
The Beretta 92 is one of the greatest designed handguns of all time. The Wilson and Langdon variants are some of the best combat handguns out there. Love mine.
yes i agree 100%. i love my 92FS my only complaint is i wish i could change the front sight on it but that is a small complaint. i love the design because it will more than likely feed any hollowpoint round you put in it which is very important imho. i use the MEC-GAR 18rd anti-friction magazines they work great also made in Italy .
My first handgun was a Beretta 92A1, simply because I shopped for a lot of handguns in person and the moment I gripped the Beretta 92 I just loved the way it felt in my hands. The other reason was we had a crew of bad guys breaking and entering homes in our neighborhood, so I was looking for a home defense handgun.
I didn't appreciate the M9 until after I left the USMC. Was one of these old school guys who had a hard time accepting anything new over my old M1911A1. Fast forward several years later, I love the M9 for what it is and what it offers. I have one sitting proudly next to my beloved 1911s.
@@untrust2033 I agree. I prefer the 92FS, if I"m running 9mm. However if I'm running 45, I prefer a 1911. That's how I solved that argument. It was very simple too. If you want, Try a Beretta 96 and see if you prefer it over a 1911. You probably wont. But I doubt you will prefer a Browning HiPower or 9mm 1911 over a Beretta 92 for 9mm. It gets more complicated than that, but that is something you can try. They were designed very carefully for specific things. Nothing beats them at it. Just my opinion.
@@mrsincere4640 there is nothing wrong with the M9, when they were new and regularly serviced… Abused and neglected M9s that were 20 or 30 years old in the Garrison Armoury that you were issued at random? less so…
Carried one for 26+ years, it's been through rain, mud, sand, heat, snow with thousands of rounds through it and it never failed me once. No double feeds, stove pipe, nothing, and it was deadly accurate when the time came. I was then issued a S&W M&P, hated it, constantly jammed. Went back to my Beretta. My Beretta is not a show piece, it has it's share of battle scars, but I wouldn't trade it for anything.
Something was wrong with your M&P. My M&P is the pistol I've had the longest and I can't recall ever having a jamming issue without user error (for example magazine not inserted all the way). On the other hand, for example, my Beretta 92 FS had constant light strikes with the D spring and my 92S is refusing to feed coated lead flat-nose 9mm.
As an Armorer for a large police department... The M&P (which we use the .40), I can't count the amount of times I've had to replace slides from rust, sights falling off, slide hanging up when in hot weather and other quirks the M&P has, 20+ years of carrying the M-9 in the military, no such issues, ever!
Bought my 92F in 1989, wore the first barrel out, the replacement barrel dropped right in and has been working perfectly since. Have never needed to replace any of the other parts, but I've always taken really good care of it. I've never left it uncleaned, every day I've ever shot it, I've cleaned it and lubed it. A bit obsessive I guess. I clean it with 90 percent isopropyl alcohol, and am currently lubing it with Birchwood/Casey synthetic gun oil. I've had a few failures to eject over the decades, but it was always due to wimpy ammunition, never a mechanical failure of the Beretta. I've always carried it with the safety off, currently carrying it with the On Your 6 Designs kydex IWB, can't recommend that holster highly enough, it is fantastic! 🥰
I have 3 of the 92 series. My original 92FS that I bought many years ago when I was in the USAF, a 92FS Compact, and most recently an M9A3. The Beretta is a true classic.
I just looked into it, the main reason the M9 replaced the M1911, was because the M9 had a much larger magazine capacity (17 rounds typically), which is massive, the M9 is also very affordable for how high quality it is, certainly compared to its competitors.
I own and carry both a 92FS and a Commander sized 1911 .45. These have been my favorite pistols since I was 16 back in 1980. I'm proud to be an old geezer.
I sent my Beretta 92FS Compact to Wilson for customization. An already wonderful firearm came back to me an AMAZING firearm. I was so impressed with the quality of work and that an already very accurate handgun was even MORE accurate!!! OMG - also how butter smooth it was!!!! I had no choice - had to send my 96A1, .40 cal to Wilson for customization. I was not disappointed as you might expect. My two Wilson Combat customized Berettas are a few of my most treasured firearms now. I highly recommend anyone with a Beretta, even remotely thinking about sending it off to Wilson - DO IT!!!! You will NOT be disappointed in your decision.
There is just something that’s both mechanically & aesthetically pleasing about the Beretta 92 design. Kudos to both Langdon tactical and Wilson combat for bringing them forward.
Its basically a super heavy duty version of the walther p38 family, which makes sense since those are also hugely mechanically and aesthetically pleasing.
When I entered Army service in 1986, the 1911 was still widely fielded while the M9 was on the way in. I did not see the M9 until a long tour in Germany followed by a short tour in Korea. When I first took the Beretta to a night vision, pop-up combat range at Fort Carson, CO I was impressed (despite pre-conceived notions). Fast forward to Iraq in 2010, and I ended up drawing a TPE-issued H&K in.45 ACP since my Beretta was following our advanced party by several weeks. Cool! Well as Mas said, not so much. I had a grand total of three 12-round mags, with no re-supply in sight. When my M9 showed up, I quickly switched. Rest of the story? We uncovered an entire conex of .45 ACP about half-way through our tour. Oh well.
I’ve owned several Beretta’s over the years and have 2 as we speak, including the Wilson Combat 92 Centurion . I have absolutely no complaints whatsoever. Highly reliable, accurate, easy to maintain. Great pistols!
Grew up shooting the Taurus knock off (PT-92), bought my own FS-92F recently and it was like going back in time to the woods in rural TN being taught how to shoot by my father who passed away when I was 17.
I had the Taurus PT100. 40 cal version. They're really not knock offs as they were made on real Beretta machinery in Brazil. I preferred the frame mounted deckocker/safety as older Beretta 92s. Never had problems with my Taurus, very accurate & handled 40 recoil.
The Taurus PT 92, PT 99, PT 100 and PT 101 retained the Frame-mounted Safety of the original Beretta 92, and have updated it with a Hammer Drop feature. The Taurus has the capability of carrying "Cocked and Locked", preferred by the pro-1911 crowd.
Love Mas, I’ve given his book “In the Gravest Extreme”, to everyone I know who wanted to start carrying gun. It’s a little dated now but, the premise is still absolutely spot on.
About time... I carried the Beretta for about 15 years in the military and the 1911 before that. I always hear people (most of which never carried the M-9, only parroted what other people who also know little about the M-9!). Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen or Marines who always complained about it, either don't know much about weapons or just in denial. It's a great pistol, nearly always fired (cheap 115 gr military ball ammo would stovepipe sometimes), bit of a large frame, but accurate, carried enough ammo and probably the safest pistol I've ever used, you could throw it against a wall and it wouldn't fire! In fact, the military changed its language from "accidental discharge" to "negligent discharge" when transitioning from the 1911 and the M-9. Good info on the M-9!
I've always liked the beretta ever since I was younger. Now I'm in my 30's and the 1st pistol I got... 92fs. I have bought a few guns after that but the 92 is still my favorite
My first gun, Beretta M9A1. Bought it 2 years ago. Only gun I've ever shot and I'm having fun learning about it, taking it apart, getting better at shooting it.
I carried one on 2 deployments with the Army and carried one as a copper in the states. Doesn’t really matter what the Army issues, for the most part a pistol is a decoration because the Army gives very little “proper” pistol training…unless you high speed or an MP. The M9 is a great pistol
@@68Tboy I didn’t want to get into a long ass comment, but I started out as an 11C in 81’s. As a gunner, I got the 1911A1 and got no training and had to figure it out myself. Got out of the Reg Army, became a copper, and did that for 32 years…range master etc. and then also joined the NG for 20 years. Ran the ranges from .50 cal to 9mm. And I did everything I could to teach our troops how to use a pistol, so it would not just be a decoration. Carried the M9 concealed in Bosnia, because the REMFS took all the M11s.
Personally, almost 100% of the time I want to delay that first shot (unlike a marine might). Then after that I want to get the rest of the clip off quickly, and reduce the chance of mishap. I do like those little concealment Glocks as well, but they don't feel as natural to aim and shoot than the M9.
Love my Berettas. Bought a 1980 first gen in 1983. It’s retired mostly. Have a 92A1 with a lot of Wilson combat parts and beretta performance parts. Decock only. I shoot from DA all the time.
i haven't fired a gun since my army days , 1984-87. Mp . i carried a .45. big heavy gun. i just bought a 92fs and love it. i've been to the range a few times . not sure if its the gun or me , but i still got it.
My friends and other people at the range back in the 90's used to say when I shot my Beretta it was the extension of my will through my right hand. I now have a 92x and run it with the rounded grip for that classic feel.
I have great respect for Massad Ayoob and I love the Beretta 92. Ever since I was a kid and I saw the beautiful Beretta in the movies like Lethal Weapon and Die Hard I fell in love with the gun. Now as an adult and having been in Armed Security and Executive Protection for almost 20 years, I'm glad to say that the Beretta 92FS is one of the handguns that I own.
The Beretta 92 is one of the Very Best pistols on Planet Earth. Most haters have no experience at all, or they tried one that was on its last leg, because the Military shot the life out of them. I own 7 Beretta 92 pistols, 3 of which are Wilson Berettas and they are all Fabulous to shoot & Own….. talk to a Real Owner to get the True Talk if you know what I mean. Cheers Guys, Check out a Wilson Beretta 92 of your choice, and you will be saying you are in Love too. Not Sorry for telling the Truth! 🥳🤠👍🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸 Beretta Sr.
Another great video, Mas. I bought my first Beretta 92 back in 1988 (at the Kittery Trading Post, which you've no doubt visited), and I carried it for probably twenty years. I don't carry that particular gun any longer, simply because it has sentimental value to me, but I still carry an M9A3 nowadays. The 92 platform are all just excellent shooters, in my opinion. And I'm also fond of manual safeties, because obviously safety is paramount, and the Beretta 92 has that base covered as well. You can't go wrong with one.
I fell in love with the Beretta Model 92FS due to my time serving in the Army, never failed to qualify expert with the weapon. So when I was medically retired I went & bought my own. Even replicated the laser sight that my issue M9 had. Only difference is I installed a SilencerCo threaded barrel to run mine suppressed on occasion.
@@nbonner75 nailed it. Fudds... The number one reason I stopped working at a firearms outfitter. Their endless and tiresome assertions and need to debate everything with a universe of anecdotal statements that revolves around the 1911. Ayoob's rhetoric is a stroke fest for guys who won't buy a "plastic" gun and nothing under .45. Meanwhile, they'll waddle into a gun shop with their middle-aged wife for her FIRST gun and announce (out of breath from walking across the parking lot), "I need a little gun for her to put in her purse". He needs the gun. She can't speak for herself. He deserves an $1,100 pistol in a combat caliber but, her life isn't worth that and .380 will do. A holster is too expensive and hard for her to figure out so we'll just put it in her purse. You know... The first thing thieves go for where your wallet with your ID with your address is and now you've given them a gun too boot. Fudds... Die already.
@Brian Roome I wouldn't be offensive just because he gave bad advice in one aspect. He was a police officer for many years and has a wildly different perspective. Sometimes people get so experienced they forget what it's like for a regular person who has never experienced a traumatic critical incident or fully trained for it.
All of Langdon tactical product's are awsome. I would love to see a shooting comparison between them of maybe I'll just buy all of them to cover my base's. Have a great day and remember the Second Amendment is worth fighting for!
I have a working Beretta 96 in 10mm auto. I am willing to lend it to you if you are willing to seriously consider producing one. The 96 brigadier platform runs the 10mm auto much better than you probably think. People have offered me thousands of dollars for mine. So i think there's a real market for it. Especially with the comeback the 10mm auto is making.
A 92F was the first pistol I bought and it’s still one of my best shooters. I think it’s been surpassed by other guns for sure in reliability and so forth but the action is super smooth and I believe one of the reasons it shoots so flat and soft. Great shooter
I bought one of the original Italian 92's prior to them being made in the USA. Still have it and still love it to this day! I do not have large hands but that has never bothered me as it has others since it is a large gun. Coming from mostly shooting revolvers back then the S/D trigger was never much of an issue other than the length of pull but practice solved that issue, at least for me. Love having Mas on this channel. His knowledge in this field is encyclopedic and a must for all students of the gun.
Mine has 'Made in Italy' stamped on the side. I bought it from a retailer ca. 2002... When did Beretta start manufacturing them in the US...? I mean, half of the prestige of an Italian gun is that it's Made in Italy...(?) That's like buying a Rolex Made in China...it may look fancy, but is it a Rolex...? ...Maybe? But the Rolex you'd prefer to own...? ...Maybe, ...but then I might suspect you were a Chinese Commumist...(?) A Swiss watch is made in Switzerland. An Italian gun is made in the US...! Wtf?!
@@j.macjordan9779 I do believe it was contractual due to the US military issuing the pistol, if memory serves. I worked at a place that I had to do a ton of testing with a US made M9 and it worked as required. It had well over 90,000 rounds (this was by may count, no idea how many it had prior to me coming onboard) before the frame started failing. Of course I rebuilt the thing every 5,000 rounds or it never would have got that far. Even the VP of Beretta at the time, not sure if he is still there, was some what surprised, and not, at the round count. He knew my maintenance routine helped. He requested that frame back, sent me a new M9 frame to continue testing. He wanted to send the old one off for a complete analysis to see just how bad it was and where it was cracking.
@@boomanh63 - That's actually pretty awesome! To be clear, I didn't mean to imply the US cannot manufacture high quality goods - firearms in this instance. I mean, I'm an American; I'm familiar with American made firearms. I own American made firearms. It'd be self-defeating for me to dog the U.S.'s capabilities - one, I'd be wrong; two, if America/Americans do well, I do well. So, US firearms, I have zero doubts; .....Unless an enemy of the US is reading this, in that case, ...US firearms?! ...You can run right up to one those...it's not going to fire! lol! They're terrible... It's literally only the expectation implied by the Brand name - it's an Italian company, the Made In Italy stamp is just the mark that fits as one would expect at face value. Would I still use a US manufactured Beretta - Yes, I would. I imagine I've come close to purchasing a US Beretta on numerous occcasions if Beretta is still in the US manufacturing firearms. In terms of reliability & which would be more practical to carry, if I had my Italian 92 & a US manufactured 92, ...I'd probably go for the US manufactured 92....(?) Hopefully that makes some sort of sense; either that or I have some sort of sick fetish...which would be just my luck! ...lol; No, but Italian Beretta, US Beretta - I like Beretta.
@@j.macjordan9779 I never took your answer wrong Brother. I was just passing my personal experience with the M9. Beretta has been in business longer than any other gun maker that I am aware of so they should be getting it right! Even the VP I mentioned asked what I thought of my Italian model versus the US. The only complaint I have was the plastic Guide Rod in the US as compared to the Aluminum one in the Italian and even then I had bent the Aluminum one and replaced it with a Wolff all steel one, which I razed him about. Thankfully he took it as not a complaint, which it wasn't, as I have over 15,000 rounds through my personal Beretta. He even stated that he wasn't truly surprised at my round count but that the average shooter would rarely get that high and if they did their maintenance correctly they should have no issues until they got up there like I did. He even asked if I rebuilt mine as often, which I do, and he said most rarely even check the recoil springs. I know this as a fact since I help most of my shooting buddies with their maintenance and that is the first thing I look at if i know they have had their pistols for a long time or have bought a used one.
Because of the adoption of the Beretta by the military and I think that the movie Lethal Weapon did the same thing for Beretta sales like the movie Dirty Harry did for Smith & Wesson model 29 44 magnum sales.
sadly enough the movie "Die Hard" is why Nutnfancy is such a Glock Fanboy. Facts. Who calls himself a "knife review channel FIRST" and then on knife review #30? He reviews a Glock Field Knife.... yeah go find a real knife channel that actually reviews that knife... just sayin
I became predjudiced against Beretta thanks to my time in the Navy. When I got out I bought one of my own and it seems that when they havent had 50 thousand rounds pumped thru them, they're actually decent guns.
They're way better than "Decent". Funny enough since the US Military replaced the M9, the M9 and M92 have only gotten more popular on the civilian market. There's more new variations of than ever before, and the frame-mounted safety variants give the striker fired polymers a big run for their $money. I'll take the Beretta M9 and M92 over any polymer striker fired pistol.
I've been following Mas for many, many years now. When I first started shooting and considered carrying, my mentor told me that the one book that I MUST read was Mr. Ayoob's "In the Gravest Extreme." What really blows my mind is that as much as I've learned from him over the years, virtually every time I listen to him talk, I STILL learn at least 1 new thing.
I acquired a 96 in a trade and it became my favorite handgun to shoot immediately. As a 1911 guy, I found the transition to the 92/96 to be natural and easy to adopt; great video, thank you.
The other cool thing about the 96 is you can put a 9mm barrel in with no other changes and have 2 guns in one. 9mm even works out of the .40 mags, although the witness holes don't line up.
@@chunkybuttz844 sure they made double stack 1911's but the fact that women were going to be shooting them meant they had no choice but to go to 9mm. As for getting "butthurt" that would be a discussion for why HK beat out glock for decades... one of those guns will shoot a 2" group at 25 meters... the other will not. One of those guns is known for having to replace each and every part with aftermarket parts and the other is not... can you guess - the glock or the HK ?
Sir I am a retired police office, retired and now a Pa. State Constable. I would like to say I learn so much from your video, Also the things that I pickup I pass onto my student at our gun club basic firearms safety class. I wish that we could meet sometime in the future. Please keep making the you tubes videos
I remember when my MP company transitioned from the 1911 to the 92F (M-9) and the training we did to complete phasing in the Berettas. It was the first time I had seen and trained on a F.A.T.S. simulator.
reat video! I look into the Wilson one. most definably. 20 yrs in the Marine infantry, carrying this pistol,( Beretta ) it was the first one i sought for upon retiring, to make my personal carry. great weapon. i have broken my share of locking blocks too. love em all !
I have an old school 92, mag release on the bottom of the grip, that followed me home from South America. Works like a charm even with the different mage change style. It's never let me down.
Agreed! I got a surplus Italian police 92S, I think that’s the style you’re describing. Very natural motion to press the release and catch the magazine with my left hand.
@@colemanbonner My Dad, a Dominican Immigrant, saw one in a Lehigh Valley, Pennsylvania gunshop in 1981 at the age of 14. His uncle and cousins went on a camping vacation out that way and stopped at the gunshop for kicks. The gunshop owners told his uncle that those M92's were good sellers, so the M92 series was quite known before the US Military adopted it. A few days later, they went to a range near the campground, and he got to fire that original M92. He was hooked on Firearms and has been ever since.
I snagged a Beretta 92X Centurion from a pawn shop a bit over a year ago. The first semi I bought besides a Sig in which I didn’t immediately regret. It was abused and poorly maintained, but a custom cerakote, and wood grips make it one of the sharpest looking pistols I have, and it shoots great! It’s right up there with my beloved Sigs.
The only Beretta I've ever had in my hand was an old 25cal semi auto that my stepdad taught me how to shoot with. Seen Beretta around but that's all. I'm going to have to explore! Thanks again.
Well said, Massad. My first new pistol was the Beretta. I looked at several, including the CZ 75, but landed on the Beretta. Since then i have purchased several other pistols, but i really like my Beretta, and have a few Wilson parts on it that really make it perform, mainly the G-10 grips, which are a game changer for average size hands, and the texture is perfect.
I joined my first agency in 1996 and was issued a Beretta 96F. When transitioned to the Glock I made the decision to purchase my gun and a brand new one that had never been fired. Now that I have retired and have the choice to carry what I want my edc is either the Beretta or SIG P-229. Something about the DA/SA just appeals to me.
92’s have one of the easiest takedown levers in history. I know that sounds like a funny thing to focus on, but some other guns are a pain to field strip.
True. 92Fs M9s are super fast to field strip. The new Walther PDP 9mm are ✔ too. Simple to take apart, put together. My compact PDP has 0 problems, jams with 9mm factory ammunition.
You make a good point but one big drawback in my opinion is the ridiculously difficult disassembly and reassembly of the slide for cleaning and maintenance
@@protoculture289 You can go 30k rounds without doing that in an m9 lol. Just use the takedown lever, slide out the bits that come out and give it normal maintenance. Only part that really busts seems to be the locking block which is like a 30 dollar fix.
lol sometimes simple is always better. i love my 92FS first time i fired it i fell in love with it so accurate . All my shots were in the center such a well made pistol.
I though many people pistol fundamentals and usually bring multiple firearms to the range for new shooters to chose from. One common denominator - new shooters always shoot most accurately with fs92 than any other. It’s simply brilliant. It’s a shooters pistol out of factory.
@@MbisonBalrog I think there are couple reasons. First its well balanced terms of slide to frame weight to its overall size. My perceived recoil is absolutely more noticeable on the Glock. Second, trigger is clean, distinct and made out of metal, which lets me almost slide my finger off the trigger for a smooth squeeze. its also 3.5 lbs pull vs Glock 5.3-5.5. Glocks trigger is plastic and serrated, combined with heavier pull makes a person prone to over-push or over-pull the trigger. It can be solved with training, I can shoot my Glocks without jerking, but with 92 its less effort and quicker to get proficient. Last, the angle of the grip relative to the sights on Glock is lower (from 90 deg), which means I have to rotate my wrist further forward, which is further from neutral position of the joint. For example, clinch your fist and set your arm on the table bottom of the fist down, then do it with each pistol in hand. In my case, FS92 grip angle is closer to my natural elbow-wrist angle than Glock. If someone must have a Glock design with FS92/1911 ergonomics, look into polymer 80 either frame or complete pistol, its a great compromise.
@@MbisonBalrog forgot to add - I have both PT92 and FS92. Taurus version is every bit as quality as Beretta, I would buy PT92 over FS as its offers much better value for identical firearm.
I remember years ago when a pro photographer gave me the same advice for the shutter release that you give for the trigger... don't press with the tip of the index finger, press it with the joint between the distal and middle phalanges. Makes for a much smooth transition.
The 92x RDO Compact is my first hammer fired pistol, 115rds through it so far I love it, now I'm trying to decide if I want to convert to "decocker only" , as I couldn't find a "G" model locally. Good informational video!
I have owned a 92 compact and currently own a full size. Its definitely a go to. I always guessed that when LEO started moving from revovers, this and the Smith 5906 were good choices because of the trigger, and ease of loading using the decock feature.
My two M9 horror stories: I was a competitive shooter, with brown (Bullseye)and black (combat) guns, and the Opns NCO in the TXARNG SARTS. When we were using our "clapped out" M1911s, I was steadily climbing the leg points toward Distinguished Pistol. I was one of the first to go Distinguished after they dropped the requirement that some of your points had to be bullseye; mine were all Combat. Then they picked up our 1911s and issued us M9s. One: Mine had such a sloppy fit where the muzzle stuck out the front of the slide (it'd wiggle even when in battery) that I took it to our armorer to have him check it. He told me that many of them did that and that there was no fix for it. The blasted thing simply wouldn't group acceptably. To clarify, it'd stay on a popup silhouette, just not in the scoring rings of the targets used in Combat Pistol competition. It took me a long, long time to finally leg out. Two: The same M9 seized up mid-match at the five-State Regionals. The slide was stuck closed, with a live round in the chamber and rounds in the magazine. I raised my hand, yelled what was going on to the Safety NCO and the NGMTU Armorer came out with a punch and mallet to knock the locking lugs out of battery, clear the pistol and take it to his shop. There was no re-shoot for me; so there went some leg points that I really needed. At the next NG Nationals (Winston P Wilson Match), there was a Beretta rep talking to the assembled pistol shooters. This is shooters from fifty States and seven possessions, that have earned their way to compete at the last level before the Reserve Component Match and the All-Army Match. He bragged on the M9's alleged reliability (I wouldn't have taken mine to a pig breedin'), and I stood up and asked him whether Beretta had solved the problem of the locking lugs twisting and locking the gun up. He claimed he had never heard of that. My instant hero, the NGMTU Senior Match Armorer, stood up with a GALLON BAGGIE about half full of twisted locking blocks that he'd had to replace. Didn't say a word. We shooters jeered the rep til he walked away. I wish I could have conveyed that to the late, great Paul Harrell, but he continually snubbed every time I tried to get him to understand what had happened to me. I literally cried when I had to turn in my NM M14, M24 SWS, Box O' Bullseye Pistols, and blueprinted M16A2 upper, but there was no sentimentality in divesting myself of that M9.
Don't forget the two biggest reasons why civilians bought this pistol: Martin Riggs and John McClane. Seriously, I bought my first Beretta in the early '90s simply to have a facsimile of the new military sidearm, but eventually came to realize that it's a darn good handgun just standing on its own merits. It's as accurate and reliable as you're ever going to find in a service pistol, and it's also one of the best-looking guns out there as well. The problems with the military-issue M9s were mostly due to bad magazines and failure to replace recoil springs and locking blocks in a timely manner. If you don't perform proper maintenance any machine will eventually break down.
agreed, but Van Damme used it a lot too. I was a big fan of all 3.
Wait what was that movie? Had the braveheart guy (horrible with names) that played Riggs. Oh yeah, lethal weapon lol bet that movie didn’t age well.
I even call berettas Mel Gibson!!! Lol
Same here.
Arnie used them in various movies!
I could listen to Mas all day long. He is SO brilliant and easy to understand, he is a fantastic teacher.
His blood pressure must be low! He's so mellow, and savvy!!!
He has a good voice too
@@J1Z06 seems like he could definitely take care of himself in the hostile situation and I wouldn't want to be the one opposing him I'd rather him be on our side you know I'm saying
ABSOLUTELY !! He has an EXCELLENT understanding of the background behind WHY decisions were made, and how those decisions and choices have either proven Valid, or been changed, based on experience. Long Live Mas !!!
@dtcowlick he's a man that's why
I actually got a 92F while I was a senior in high school. It was my first pistol. I'll never get rid of it & it still shoots amazingly. Accuracy with it is unreal. Wanted one because of Lethal Weapon and Die Hard
I have a 92F,92FS centurion,and a new 92FS.
I still can’t go through a door without saying Yippee ki yay motherfucker.
I started out with the 92FS, but this dickhead was in a car in the street threatening me and my family. I still don't know why ? He was parked in my driveway until he noticed I had a pistol. He got off real quick. It was in my belt and never was drawn. He changed tactics and started trying to get a response from me. Not bloody likely. He hit the emergency button on his phone and started telling me that I'm a big tough guy with my pistol. I didn't say a word. I knew what he was doing. I was on my property back leaning on the garage door. I could hear the sirens coming. I never left my property. 20 cops showed up for nothing. They at gunpoint ordered me off my property so I had the pistol. 3 charges
# 1 Attempted Murder. Which is funny shit because I am a target shooter and my father managed a shooting range. I was there every time it was open. Trust me if I wanted it would have been Murder. He was 2 carlegenths away, please. Then attempted use of a feallony weapon? That my lawyer said that one is made up.
#3 Was use of a deadly weapon on public on the road. They ordered me off at gunpoint. Luckily I had the best Lawyer in Lake County Illinois. He had me released to his custody. I never have been in a jail cell. He got the 3 turned into, " Vehicular Trespassing" ?? I had the same reaction.
That's a driving offense. 100.00 plus 1 year of probation. The probation office is so busy they looked at the charge, they asked me if I drink ? I replied no. She shook her head and said, you can come in every 3rd month. She was pissed off because of probation issued for stupid shit. They never drug tested me. Anything in my system was perception. 4 times and I'm done. The judge asked the lawyers what to do with the pistol ? My lawyer asked if it was a family or collectable, I said no so the lawyer said it would cost to much to get it back and I should buy a new one. They stuck it in the evidence room and forgot about it. 11 years later I moved to northern Wisconsin from the Toilet called Illinois. 11 years later I got this letter from Lake County Sheriff Department in Illinois. I thought oh boy here we go again. Turns out that the evidence room was getting full and they did a audit and found my 92. At the time I still have a clean past. The letter said that they are in possession of a Beretta pistol that belongs to me and if I want it returned to contact so and let them know that you want it. I had to have it transferred to a FFL dealer. No problem. 20 bucks and 42 and some change. Now I have that 92FS and a M-9.
@@jamesconerly1039 92 Centurion And @ 96 Centurion.
I guess the state you are in allowed 18 year olds to possess handguns? NC still doesn't.. required to be 21.
When this man speaks, you just know he is giving you the strait truth with no embellishment. An encyclopedia of knowledge and actual practical application.
I remember reading articles in gun magazines at drugstores he wrote when I was a young teen. (His name is hard to forget)
I’m 56 now.
Beretta 92’s, 1911’s, and CZ 75’s are my three go to semi auto handguns.
What, no P226s?
Two out of three ain’t bad! I hope to hit the trifecta before years end.
I add a g19 to that list. Starting to love the cz stuff after a little finishing work.
@@JustDefense Sig hates lefties, so no.
@Jake Stockton Overpriced and discontinued.
I’ve relied on them for over 20 years now. Compete with them, carry them. For me, they are ‘the one.’ Folks like Wilson and LTT have given them new life, too. Long live the 92.
I was introduced to the Beretta in the Navy. I bought mine more than 20 years ago and in spite of my nearsightedness, my 92FS is still the most accurate firearm I've used.
I have been following Massad since the mid 80's when I started carrying. I read his article on the Miami FBI fire fight in 1986. I am so glad he's working with Wilson Combat on these videos.
The Beretta 92 is one of the greatest designed handguns of all time. The Wilson and Langdon variants are some of the best combat handguns out there. Love mine.
yes i agree 100%. i love my 92FS my only complaint is i wish i could change the front sight on it but that is a small complaint. i love the design because it will more than likely feed any hollowpoint round you put in it which is very important imho. i use the MEC-GAR 18rd anti-friction magazines they work great also made in Italy .
I have the original Langdon M9 variant and it’s a fabulous shooter.
Greatest? not even close. If you like hot shells down your shirt and a gun that breaks all the time.
@@voodooreptiles3553 I’ve put thousands of rounds through them in the Marines and I can tell you that you are wrong as fuck my friend.
@@voodooreptiles3553 Sounds like you havnt been doing maintenance on your gun because my gun hasnt broke.
My first handgun was a Beretta 92A1, simply because I shopped for a lot of handguns in person and the moment I gripped the Beretta 92 I just loved the way it felt in my hands. The other reason was we had a crew of bad guys breaking and entering homes in our neighborhood, so I was looking for a home defense handgun.
92fs was my first handgun bought 1995 day I turned 21 !!! Still have it today!
Just like me, but a little older, compact 92 with a big brother S&W .357 686
The beauty of the Beretta 92 and the generous round count is what convinced me.
I carry the 92fs parabellum full size, fired hundreds of rounds through it, no feeding or extraction problems bomb proof design in my opinion
I didn't appreciate the M9 until after I left the USMC. Was one of these old school guys who had a hard time accepting anything new over my old M1911A1. Fast forward several years later, I love the M9 for what it is and what it offers. I have one sitting proudly next to my beloved 1911s.
Best solution to the 9mm vs 45 debate - Both!
@@untrust2033 I agree. I prefer the 92FS, if I"m running 9mm. However if I'm running 45, I prefer a 1911. That's how I solved that argument. It was very simple too.
If you want, Try a Beretta 96 and see if you prefer it over a 1911. You probably wont. But I doubt you will prefer a Browning HiPower or 9mm 1911 over a Beretta 92 for 9mm.
It gets more complicated than that, but that is something you can try.
They were designed very carefully for specific things. Nothing beats them at it. Just my opinion.
I don’t think anyone appreciates the M9.. They appreciate the Beretta 92 … 😏
@@mrsincere4640 there is nothing wrong with the M9, when they were new and regularly serviced…
Abused and neglected M9s that were 20 or 30 years old in the Garrison Armoury that you were issued at random? less so…
I still use a Beretta 92fs for home defense, it's a Damm good gun.
Carried one for 26+ years, it's been through rain, mud, sand, heat, snow with thousands of rounds through it and it never failed me once. No double feeds, stove pipe, nothing, and it was deadly accurate when the time came. I was then issued a S&W M&P, hated it, constantly jammed. Went back to my Beretta. My Beretta is not a show piece, it has it's share of battle scars, but I wouldn't trade it for anything.
Something was wrong with your M&P. My M&P is the pistol I've had the longest and I can't recall ever having a jamming issue without user error (for example magazine not inserted all the way).
On the other hand, for example, my Beretta 92 FS had constant light strikes with the D spring and my 92S is refusing to feed coated lead flat-nose 9mm.
As an Armorer for a large police department... The M&P (which we use the .40), I can't count the amount of times I've had to replace slides from rust, sights falling off, slide hanging up when in hot weather and other quirks the M&P has, 20+ years of carrying the M-9 in the military, no such issues, ever!
Did you change any parts in that 26 years? Was there a point you had to replace any springs or anything like that? Upgrades you perfer?
@@TheAnnoyingBoss No major parts change other than routine maintenance. The only upgrade I added was a pair of Hogue grips.
@@Snubrevolver M&Ps are some of the worst pistols. I've ever used.
Can't recommend them.
Bought my 92F in 1989, wore the first barrel out, the replacement barrel dropped right in and has been working perfectly since. Have never needed to replace any of the other parts, but I've always taken really good care of it. I've never left it uncleaned, every day I've ever shot it, I've cleaned it and lubed it. A bit obsessive I guess. I clean it with 90 percent isopropyl alcohol, and am currently lubing it with Birchwood/Casey synthetic gun oil. I've had a few failures to eject over the decades, but it was always due to wimpy ammunition, never a mechanical failure of the Beretta. I've always carried it with the safety off, currently carrying it with the On Your 6 Designs kydex IWB, can't recommend that holster highly enough, it is fantastic! 🥰
I have 3 of the 92 series. My original 92FS that I bought many years ago when I was in the USAF, a 92FS Compact, and most recently an M9A3. The Beretta is a true classic.
WOW
I just looked into it, the main reason the M9 replaced the M1911, was because the M9 had a much larger magazine capacity (17 rounds typically), which is massive, the M9 is also very affordable for how high quality it is, certainly compared to its competitors.
No it was a deal with Italy to keep our bases open
Also m9 has a 15rd mag not 17
@@jimbob465 nevermind that, get the 18 rd mags by MecGar. They’re the best!
I own and carry both a 92FS and a Commander sized 1911 .45. These have been my favorite pistols since I was 16 back in 1980. I'm proud to be an old geezer.
I sent my Beretta 92FS Compact to Wilson for customization. An already wonderful firearm came back to me an AMAZING firearm. I was so impressed with the quality of work and that an already very accurate handgun was even MORE accurate!!! OMG - also how butter smooth it was!!!! I had no choice - had to send my 96A1, .40 cal to Wilson for customization. I was not disappointed as you might expect. My two Wilson Combat customized Berettas are a few of my most treasured firearms now. I highly recommend anyone with a Beretta, even remotely thinking about sending it off to Wilson - DO IT!!!! You will NOT be disappointed in your decision.
How much did the Wilson customization on your. 92FS cost you?
I loved the M9 so much during basic training... then I found a 96A1 and fell in love all over again. For me personally, the .40 was a dream come true.
My career MP son loves the 40.... Carries the M9. He's an instructor too.
I've never shot one. 🙄
There is just something that’s both mechanically & aesthetically pleasing about the Beretta 92 design. Kudos to both Langdon tactical and Wilson combat for bringing them forward.
Its basically a super heavy duty version of the walther p38 family, which makes sense since those are also hugely mechanically and aesthetically pleasing.
When I entered Army service in 1986, the 1911 was still widely fielded while the M9 was on the way in. I did not see the M9 until a long tour in Germany followed by a short tour in Korea. When I first took the Beretta to a night vision, pop-up combat range at Fort Carson, CO I was impressed (despite pre-conceived notions). Fast forward to Iraq in 2010, and I ended up drawing a TPE-issued H&K in.45 ACP since my Beretta was following our advanced party by several weeks. Cool! Well as Mas said, not so much. I had a grand total of three 12-round mags, with no re-supply in sight. When my M9 showed up, I quickly switched.
Rest of the story? We uncovered an entire conex of .45 ACP about half-way through our tour. Oh well.
Like Love or Hate Beretta, they make some beautiful firearms, and respect them being the oldest player in the game. (1526). #jakehunter88
The oldest industrial concern in the world.
@@darbyheavey406 Nope. Research
1 vote for Love em here✋ lol
Nope new generation don’t understand it’s the Browning Hi Power best 9mm ever made period
@First Last that’s a negative real men shoot 38 Super
I’ve owned several Beretta’s over the years and have 2 as we speak, including the Wilson Combat 92 Centurion . I have absolutely no complaints whatsoever. Highly reliable, accurate, easy to maintain. Great pistols!
Like & respect Massad...Love my Berettas. God Bless America 🇺🇸🙏❤
Same i got two 92s (one is a 96) and two px4s
I’ve had my 92SB since the early 80s. I will never give it up.
I've been a Massad fan since the 80s. As another person says, I'll listen to everything he has to say. Greetings from Brazil. God bless our countries.
Grew up shooting the Taurus knock off (PT-92), bought my own FS-92F recently and it was like going back in time to the woods in rural TN being taught how to shoot by my father who passed away when I was 17.
I had the Taurus PT100. 40 cal version. They're really not knock offs as they were made on real Beretta machinery in Brazil. I preferred the frame mounted deckocker/safety as older Beretta 92s. Never had problems with my Taurus, very accurate & handled 40 recoil.
My first pistol in 1989 was a Taurus PT-99 which is a copy of an earlier Beretta 92/99 version. Still an outstanding gun today.
The Taurus PT 92, PT 99, PT 100 and PT 101 retained the Frame-mounted Safety of the original Beretta 92, and have updated it with a Hammer Drop feature. The Taurus has the capability of carrying "Cocked and Locked", preferred by the pro-1911 crowd.
@@johnjohnsn7633
I like the double action / single action feature.
Love hearing from seniors in the gun world with high levels of experience im absolutely paying attention
Mas talking about the 92, especially the Compacts. This is my happy place.
Love Mas, I’ve given his book “In the Gravest Extreme”, to everyone I know who wanted to start carrying gun. It’s a little dated now but, the premise is still absolutely spot on.
I got my autographed copy back in the mid-80's. A treasured keepsake and of course a great book.
I had one (awesome book!). Loaned it to a co-worker and never got it back. 😒
The Beretta 92fs Compact L has been my EDC for 7 years now. I just love the Beretta 92 or M9 handguns!!!
About time... I carried the Beretta for about 15 years in the military and the 1911 before that. I always hear people (most of which never carried the M-9, only parroted what other people who also know little about the M-9!). Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen or Marines who always complained about it, either don't know much about weapons or just in denial. It's a great pistol, nearly always fired (cheap 115 gr military ball ammo would stovepipe sometimes), bit of a large frame, but accurate, carried enough ammo and probably the safest pistol I've ever used, you could throw it against a wall and it wouldn't fire! In fact, the military changed its language from "accidental discharge" to "negligent discharge" when transitioning from the 1911 and the M-9. Good info on the M-9!
I've always liked the beretta ever since I was younger. Now I'm in my 30's and the 1st pistol I got... 92fs. I have bought a few guns after that but the 92 is still my favorite
My first gun, Beretta M9A1. Bought it 2 years ago. Only gun I've ever shot and I'm having fun learning about it, taking it apart, getting better at shooting it.
I could listen to this man for hours.
massad is the best.took my first class in 1988.
I carried one on 2 deployments with the Army and carried one as a copper in the states. Doesn’t really matter what the Army issues, for the most part a pistol is a decoration because the Army gives very little “proper” pistol training…unless you high speed or an MP. The M9 is a great pistol
I heard not every infantry man even gets a pistol right ?
@@68Tboy I didn’t want to get into a long ass comment, but I started out as an 11C in 81’s. As a gunner, I got the 1911A1 and got no training and had to figure it out myself. Got out of the Reg Army, became a copper, and did that for 32 years…range master etc. and then also joined the NG for 20 years. Ran the ranges from .50 cal to 9mm. And I did everything I could to teach our troops how to use a pistol, so it would not just be a decoration. Carried the M9 concealed in Bosnia, because the REMFS took all the M11s.
@@357-swagnumultramagax9 Correct, unless they were an officer, 1st Sgt, or some jobs on heavy weapons got a pistol . No battle was won with a pistol
@@danw7156 thank you for your service sir
The role of the pistol is changing, almost everyone now carries one and there is more handgun training.
To me the Beretta 92 has the best feel of any full size handgun. It's also the best looking to me.
You seem to have confused the word Beretta 92 with the words Browning hi power lol
@@bowlofrice8 LOL, that's also a nice one, along with the CZ. 75. 😆
My alphanumeric response: P38
Personally, almost 100% of the time I want to delay that first shot (unlike a marine might).
Then after that I want to get the rest of the clip off quickly, and reduce the chance of mishap.
I do like those little concealment Glocks as well, but they don't feel as natural to aim and shoot than the M9.
Carried 1911-A1 on my first ship(93 to 98) after that carried the Beretta M9 till I retired in 2011. I have both a 1911-A1 and Beretta M9 today.
Love my Berettas. Bought a 1980 first gen in 1983. It’s retired mostly. Have a 92A1 with a lot of Wilson combat parts and beretta performance parts. Decock only. I shoot from DA all the time.
Overall it is just one of the coolest looking handguns ever made too.
It’s the pistol you draw as a kid - just the perfect shape. Kind of like kids draw a stratocaster when they draw a guitar. Just Iconic.
@@BeefNEggs057 you must be good at drawing. Lol
@@darts7116 Haha good call out….no let me rephrase that. It was the pistol I saw in my head but looked like a stick once I drew it. 😂
It’s a sexy looking pistol
@@BeefNEggs057 the pistols I drew as kid look like Glocks with 90 degree grips,lol
i haven't fired a gun since my army days , 1984-87. Mp . i carried a .45. big heavy gun. i just bought a 92fs and love it. i've been to the range a few times . not sure if its the gun or me , but i still got it.
I always listen to Mas, enjoyed the video.
More to come, stay tuned. Thanks for watching.
Yet another well stated depiction of a wonderful gun by the very best, Massad Ayoob.
My friends and other people at the range back in the 90's used to say when I shot my Beretta it was the extension of my will through my right hand.
I now have a 92x and run it with the rounded grip for that classic feel.
I have great respect for Massad Ayoob and I love the Beretta 92. Ever since I was a kid and I saw the beautiful Beretta in the movies like Lethal Weapon and Die Hard I fell in love with the gun. Now as an adult and having been in Armed Security and Executive Protection for almost 20 years, I'm glad to say that the Beretta 92FS is one of the handguns that I own.
The Beretta 92 is one of the Very Best pistols on Planet Earth. Most haters have no experience at all, or they tried one that was on its last leg, because the Military shot the life out of them. I own 7 Beretta 92 pistols, 3 of which are Wilson Berettas and they are all Fabulous to shoot & Own….. talk to a Real Owner to get the True Talk if you know what I mean. Cheers Guys, Check out a Wilson Beretta 92 of your choice, and you will be saying you are in Love too. Not Sorry for telling the Truth! 🥳🤠👍🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
Beretta Sr.
Can’t imagine why anyone would hate a Beretta 92. Makes zero sense.
Never had any problems with it as an le issue
Another great video, Mas. I bought my first Beretta 92 back in 1988 (at the Kittery Trading Post, which you've no doubt visited), and I carried it for probably twenty years. I don't carry that particular gun any longer, simply because it has sentimental value to me, but I still carry an M9A3 nowadays. The 92 platform are all just excellent shooters, in my opinion. And I'm also fond of manual safeties, because obviously safety is paramount, and the Beretta 92 has that base covered as well. You can't go wrong with one.
I fell in love with the Beretta Model 92FS due to my time serving in the Army, never failed to qualify expert with the weapon. So when I was medically retired I went & bought my own. Even replicated the laser sight that my issue M9 had. Only difference is I installed a SilencerCo threaded barrel to run mine suppressed on occasion.
Man Berettas are beautiful guns. You get the accuracy and safety too. One great package.
I'll listen to anything Massad Ayoob has to say.
@Brian Roome he seems trapped in some very dated conventions. He’s basically an eloquent “fudd”.
@@nbonner75 nailed it. Fudds... The number one reason I stopped working at a firearms outfitter. Their endless and tiresome assertions and need to debate everything with a universe of anecdotal statements that revolves around the 1911.
Ayoob's rhetoric is a stroke fest for guys who won't buy a "plastic" gun and nothing under .45. Meanwhile, they'll waddle into a gun shop with their middle-aged wife for her FIRST gun and announce (out of breath from walking across the parking lot), "I need a little gun for her to put in her purse".
He needs the gun. She can't speak for herself. He deserves an $1,100 pistol in a combat caliber but, her life isn't worth that and .380 will do. A holster is too expensive and hard for her to figure out so we'll just put it in her purse. You know... The first thing thieves go for where your wallet with your ID with your address is and now you've given them a gun too boot. Fudds... Die already.
@@mattmarzula a very apt and poetic depiction of a day in the life of the gun counter clerk - brilliant! 😆
@@mattmarzula And you nailed that stuff as well. 👌
@Brian Roome I wouldn't be offensive just because he gave bad advice in one aspect. He was a police officer for many years and has a wildly different perspective. Sometimes people get so experienced they forget what it's like for a regular person who has never experienced a traumatic critical incident or fully trained for it.
92G LE MODEL was my first service pistol!
Quality video, i love my 1911, i love my 2011, I'm still in search of a good 92
Langdon Tactical makes the best custom 92s IMHO
All of Langdon tactical product's are awsome. I would love to see a shooting comparison between them of maybe I'll just buy all of them to cover my base's. Have a great day and remember the Second Amendment is worth fighting for!
I own a Langdon Tactical and a Wilson Combat Beretta Centurion. While they are both remarkable guns, I prefer the Wilson.
@@justinhedrick5656 thank you for your input, I appreciate it very much. Have a safe day and keep up the fight.
I have a working Beretta 96 in 10mm auto. I am willing to lend it to you if you are willing to seriously consider producing one. The 96 brigadier platform runs the 10mm auto much better than you probably think. People have offered me thousands of dollars for mine. So i think there's a real market for it. Especially with the comeback the 10mm auto is making.
A 92F was the first pistol I bought and it’s still one of my best shooters. I think it’s been surpassed by other guns for sure in reliability and so forth but the action is super smooth and I believe one of the reasons it shoots so flat and soft. Great shooter
Massad Ayoob is a great teacher to learn about firearms from. I've seen a few films he was in and his knowledge / techniques are always good.
I bought one of the original Italian 92's prior to them being made in the USA. Still have it and still love it to this day! I do not have large hands but that has never bothered me as it has others since it is a large gun. Coming from mostly shooting revolvers back then the S/D trigger was never much of an issue other than the length of pull but practice solved that issue, at least for me. Love having Mas on this channel. His knowledge in this field is encyclopedic and a must for all students of the gun.
Mine has 'Made in Italy' stamped on the side. I bought it from a retailer ca. 2002... When did Beretta start manufacturing them in the US...? I mean, half of the prestige of an Italian gun is that it's Made in Italy...(?) That's like buying a Rolex Made in China...it may look fancy, but is it a Rolex...? ...Maybe? But the Rolex you'd prefer to own...? ...Maybe, ...but then I might suspect you were a Chinese Commumist...(?) A Swiss watch is made in Switzerland. An Italian gun is made in the US...! Wtf?!
Replace the hammer spring with the Beretta "D" hammer spring. You're welcome.
@@j.macjordan9779 I do believe it was contractual due to the US military issuing the pistol, if memory serves. I worked at a place that I had to do a ton of testing with a US made M9 and it worked as required. It had well over 90,000 rounds (this was by may count, no idea how many it had prior to me coming onboard) before the frame started failing. Of course I rebuilt the thing every 5,000 rounds or it never would have got that far. Even the VP of Beretta at the time, not sure if he is still there, was some what surprised, and not, at the round count. He knew my maintenance routine helped. He requested that frame back, sent me a new M9 frame to continue testing. He wanted to send the old one off for a complete analysis to see just how bad it was and where it was cracking.
@@boomanh63 - That's actually pretty awesome! To be clear, I didn't mean to imply the US cannot manufacture high quality goods - firearms in this instance. I mean, I'm an American; I'm familiar with American made firearms. I own American made firearms. It'd be self-defeating for me to dog the U.S.'s capabilities - one, I'd be wrong; two, if America/Americans do well, I do well. So, US firearms, I have zero doubts;
.....Unless an enemy of the US is reading this, in that case, ...US firearms?! ...You can run right up to one those...it's not going to fire! lol! They're terrible...
It's literally only the expectation implied by the Brand name - it's an Italian company, the Made In Italy stamp is just the mark that fits as one would expect at face value. Would I still use a US manufactured Beretta - Yes, I would. I imagine I've come close to purchasing a US Beretta on numerous occcasions if Beretta is still in the US manufacturing firearms. In terms of reliability & which would be more practical to carry, if I had my Italian 92 & a US manufactured 92, ...I'd probably go for the US manufactured 92....(?)
Hopefully that makes some sort of sense; either that or I have some sort of sick fetish...which would be just my luck! ...lol; No, but Italian Beretta, US Beretta - I like Beretta.
@@j.macjordan9779 I never took your answer wrong Brother. I was just passing my personal experience with the M9. Beretta has been in business longer than any other gun maker that I am aware of so they should be getting it right! Even the VP I mentioned asked what I thought of my Italian model versus the US. The only complaint I have was the plastic Guide Rod in the US as compared to the Aluminum one in the Italian and even then I had bent the Aluminum one and replaced it with a Wolff all steel one, which I razed him about. Thankfully he took it as not a complaint, which it wasn't, as I have over 15,000 rounds through my personal Beretta. He even stated that he wasn't truly surprised at my round count but that the average shooter would rarely get that high and if they did their maintenance correctly they should have no issues until they got up there like I did. He even asked if I rebuilt mine as often, which I do, and he said most rarely even check the recoil springs. I know this as a fact since I help most of my shooting buddies with their maintenance and that is the first thing I look at if i know they have had their pistols for a long time or have bought a used one.
Nice. I only relatively recently got into Berettas and I'm glad I did. Bought the M9A1 and love it!
Massad is looking good for his age!
My first pistol was a 92fs in 1992, watched Die Hard and Lethal Weapon so many times as a kid lol.
Because of the adoption of the Beretta by the military and I think that the movie Lethal Weapon did the same thing for Beretta sales like the movie Dirty Harry did for Smith & Wesson model 29 44 magnum sales.
sadly enough the movie "Die Hard" is why Nutnfancy is such a Glock Fanboy. Facts. Who calls himself a "knife review channel FIRST" and then on knife review #30? He reviews a Glock Field Knife.... yeah go find a real knife channel that actually reviews that knife... just sayin
I became predjudiced against Beretta thanks to my time in the Navy.
When I got out I bought one of my own and it seems that when they havent had 50 thousand rounds pumped thru them, they're actually decent guns.
They're way better than "Decent". Funny enough since the US Military replaced the M9, the M9 and M92 have only gotten more popular on the civilian market.
There's more new variations of than ever before, and the frame-mounted safety variants give the striker fired polymers a big run for their $money. I'll take the Beretta M9 and M92 over any polymer striker fired pistol.
@@davidmack4185 Well its been two years and I dont recall the subject of the conversation but thanks.
I've been following Mas for many, many years now. When I first started shooting and considered carrying, my mentor told me that the one book that I MUST read was Mr. Ayoob's "In the Gravest Extreme."
What really blows my mind is that as much as I've learned from him over the years, virtually every time I listen to him talk, I STILL learn at least 1 new thing.
You are one of the best presenters Mr. Ayoob. Thank You
When a Beretta 92 is setup correctly, they are great Pistols.
I am lucky enough to have a Brigadier Tactical from Wilson Combat. It is a great pistol.
Folks do love the BrigTac. Have you tried one of our Centurions with the more Commander-sized 4.25" slide?
@@gowilsoncombat
I have not tried one, but I will say this, it is my next pistol. It is the PERFECT size.
Thank you I knew there was a lot of reasons why I should like the Beretta's
I acquired a 96 in a trade and it became my favorite handgun to shoot immediately. As a 1911 guy, I found the transition to the 92/96 to be natural and easy to adopt; great video, thank you.
The other cool thing about the 96 is you can put a 9mm barrel in with no other changes and have 2 guns in one. 9mm even works out of the .40 mags, although the witness holes don't line up.
you aint no "1911 guy" if you transition to 9mm DA anything
@@campsitez2355 In your opinion.
@@campsitez2355 I always laughed when people said there are those that get all butthurt over 1911s
@@chunkybuttz844 sure they made double stack 1911's but the fact that women were going to be shooting them meant they had no choice but to go to 9mm. As for getting "butthurt" that would be a discussion for why HK beat out glock for decades... one of those guns will shoot a 2" group at 25 meters... the other will not. One of those guns is known for having to replace each and every part with aftermarket parts and the other is not... can you guess - the glock or the HK ?
Sir I am a retired police office, retired and now a Pa. State Constable. I would like to say I learn so much from your video, Also the things that I pickup I pass onto my student at our gun club basic firearms safety class. I wish that we could meet sometime in the future. Please keep making the you tubes videos
I remember when my MP company transitioned from the 1911 to the 92F (M-9) and the training we did to complete phasing in the Berettas. It was the first time I had seen and trained on a F.A.T.S. simulator.
reat video! I look into the Wilson one. most definably. 20 yrs in the Marine infantry, carrying this pistol,( Beretta ) it was the first one i sought for upon retiring, to make my personal carry. great weapon. i have broken my share of locking blocks too. love em all !
I was only gojng to get one beretta, glad I went with a Wilson
TY, Massad for your expertise and articulation on the iconic combat weapon, M9/92FS!
Thanks for the video. Hope Wilson 92s will become available to order in the near future
I CC a 92 FS most times of the year with upgraded Wilson combat parts. Absolutely love it
I have an old school 92, mag release on the bottom of the grip, that followed me home from South America. Works like a charm even with the different mage change style. It's never let me down.
Same. If you're not into 'tactical' dropping your slide to the ground from 5 ft up, it actually is a faster reload IMO.
Agreed! I got a surplus Italian police 92S, I think that’s the style you’re describing. Very natural motion to press the release and catch the magazine with my left hand.
@@colemanbonner My Dad, a Dominican Immigrant, saw one in a Lehigh Valley, Pennsylvania gunshop in 1981 at the age of 14. His uncle and cousins went on a camping vacation out that way and stopped at the gunshop for kicks. The gunshop owners told his uncle that those M92's were good sellers, so the M92 series was quite known before the US Military adopted it.
A few days later, they went to a range near the campground, and he got to fire that original M92. He was hooked on Firearms and has been ever since.
I have the Taurus PT92 AFS -- wonderful gun. Love it. Greetings from South Africa
I have the 92 F/S and SB models. Just love the feel of them in my hands.
I snagged a Beretta 92X Centurion from a pawn shop a bit over a year ago. The first semi I bought besides a Sig in which I didn’t immediately regret. It was abused and poorly maintained, but a custom cerakote, and wood grips make it one of the sharpest looking pistols I have, and it shoots great! It’s right up there with my beloved Sigs.
I carry nothing but LTT Beretta’s, and most have been slightly modified with Wilson parts. Love these guns for both carry and competition!
@Jake Stockton Langdon Tactical
The only Beretta I've ever had in my hand was an old 25cal semi auto that my stepdad taught me how to shoot with. Seen Beretta around but that's all. I'm going to have to explore!
Thanks again.
My 92 is my favorite handgun I own.
Well said, Massad. My first new pistol was the Beretta. I looked at several, including the CZ 75, but landed on the Beretta. Since then i have purchased several other pistols, but i really like my Beretta, and have a few Wilson parts on it that really make it perform, mainly the G-10 grips, which are a game changer for average size hands, and the texture is perfect.
I only have a beretta 92 and a S&W M&P 2.0 and I love them both. I like the grip of the 2.0 but the beretta shoots so smooth.
I appreciate your knowledge dude! I'm looking for my first conceal carry and I continue to learn from you and your videos more than others I watch.
I joined my first agency in 1996 and was issued a Beretta 96F. When transitioned to the Glock I made the decision to purchase my gun and a brand new one that had never been fired. Now that I have retired and have the choice to carry what I want my edc is either the Beretta or SIG P-229. Something about the DA/SA just appeals to me.
The trigger on my 92 and the fact that I constantly hit bowling pins at 100 yards is why I love mine.
92’s have one of the easiest takedown levers in history. I know that sounds like a funny thing to focus on, but some other guns are a pain to field strip.
True. 92Fs M9s are super fast to field strip. The new Walther PDP 9mm are ✔ too. Simple to take apart, put together. My compact PDP has 0 problems, jams with 9mm factory ammunition.
You make a good point but one big drawback in my opinion is the ridiculously difficult disassembly and reassembly of the slide for cleaning and maintenance
The PX4 family uses a similar system.
I agree and so does the HK P30I, they use the same method as Beretta.
@@protoculture289 You can go 30k rounds without doing that in an m9 lol. Just use the takedown lever, slide out the bits that come out and give it normal maintenance. Only part that really busts seems to be the locking block which is like a 30 dollar fix.
The 92 is a seriously well built high end pistol built for the long haul. Actually priced below a lot of its competitors.
My Italian made M92A1 was tagged at $620, I thought that was a fair price!
Of course it is a well built pistol because it is all metal. No plastic junk like glock
It's my favorite for carry. And mine is just a plain ghost from the 80's with aftermarket grips.
lol sometimes simple is always better. i love my 92FS first time i fired it i fell in love with it so accurate . All my shots were in the center such a well made pistol.
The wisdom he exudes!
I though many people pistol fundamentals and usually bring multiple firearms to the range for new shooters to chose from. One common denominator - new shooters always shoot most accurately with fs92 than any other. It’s simply brilliant. It’s a shooters pistol out of factory.
Yep. I've used my 92FS to suck in several people into our gunowner/shooter world.
Why is it so accurate for beginners? I notice this too. I can’t shoot Glock for squat.
@@MbisonBalrog I think there are couple reasons. First its well balanced terms of slide to frame weight to its overall size. My perceived recoil is absolutely more noticeable on the Glock. Second, trigger is clean, distinct and made out of metal, which lets me almost slide my finger off the trigger for a smooth squeeze. its also 3.5 lbs pull vs Glock 5.3-5.5. Glocks trigger is plastic and serrated, combined with heavier pull makes a person prone to over-push or over-pull the trigger. It can be solved with training, I can shoot my Glocks without jerking, but with 92 its less effort and quicker to get proficient. Last, the angle of the grip relative to the sights on Glock is lower (from 90 deg), which means I have to rotate my wrist further forward, which is further from neutral position of the joint. For example, clinch your fist and set your arm on the table bottom of the fist down, then do it with each pistol in hand. In my case, FS92 grip angle is closer to my natural elbow-wrist angle than Glock. If someone must have a Glock design with FS92/1911 ergonomics, look into polymer 80 either frame or complete pistol, its a great compromise.
@@MbisonBalrog forgot to add - I have both PT92 and FS92. Taurus version is every bit as quality as Beretta, I would buy PT92 over FS as its offers much better value for identical firearm.
@@LazyGrayF0x beretta double action pull is a lot worse than Glock striker with trigger safety pull. Of course single action pull is easiest.
I remember years ago when a pro photographer gave me the same advice for the shutter release that you give for the trigger... don't press with the tip of the index finger, press it with the joint between the distal and middle phalanges. Makes for a much smooth transition.
The 92x RDO Compact is my first hammer fired pistol, 115rds through it so far I love it, now I'm trying to decide if I want to convert to "decocker only" , as I couldn't find a "G" model locally. Good informational video!
I have owned a 92 compact and currently own a full size. Its definitely a go to. I always guessed that when LEO started moving from revovers, this and the Smith 5906 were good choices because of the trigger, and ease of loading using the decock feature.
I have a Beretta fascination. It is also my carry gun as well, although the factory stock components are still intact. Great video sir!
@Jake Stockton
Galco Fletch OWB holster
Galco (OWB) Leather Paddle holster! We embrace our “Open Carry” rights in Coastal South Ms.#Beretta#92fs#Inox#9mm#DirtySouth@Jake Stockton
My two M9 horror stories: I was a competitive shooter, with brown (Bullseye)and black (combat) guns, and the Opns NCO in the TXARNG SARTS. When we were using our "clapped out" M1911s, I was steadily climbing the leg points toward Distinguished Pistol. I was one of the first to go Distinguished after they dropped the requirement that some of your points had to be bullseye; mine were all Combat. Then they picked up our 1911s and issued us M9s. One: Mine had such a sloppy fit where the muzzle stuck out the front of the slide (it'd wiggle even when in battery) that I took it to our armorer to have him check it. He told me that many of them did that and that there was no fix for it. The blasted thing simply wouldn't group acceptably. To clarify, it'd stay on a popup silhouette, just not in the scoring rings of the targets used in Combat Pistol competition. It took me a long, long time to finally leg out. Two: The same M9 seized up mid-match at the five-State Regionals. The slide was stuck closed, with a live round in the chamber and rounds in the magazine. I raised my hand, yelled what was going on to the Safety NCO and the NGMTU Armorer came out with a punch and mallet to knock the locking lugs out of battery, clear the pistol and take it to his shop. There was no re-shoot for me; so there went some leg points that I really needed. At the next NG Nationals (Winston P Wilson Match), there was a Beretta rep talking to the assembled pistol shooters. This is shooters from fifty States and seven possessions, that have earned their way to compete at the last level before the Reserve Component Match and the All-Army Match. He bragged on the M9's alleged reliability (I wouldn't have taken mine to a pig breedin'), and I stood up and asked him whether Beretta had solved the problem of the locking lugs twisting and locking the gun up. He claimed he had never heard of that. My instant hero, the NGMTU Senior Match Armorer, stood up with a GALLON BAGGIE about half full of twisted locking blocks that he'd had to replace. Didn't say a word. We shooters jeered the rep til he walked away. I wish I could have conveyed that to the late, great Paul Harrell, but he continually snubbed every time I tried to get him to understand what had happened to me.
I literally cried when I had to turn in my NM M14, M24 SWS, Box O' Bullseye Pistols, and blueprinted M16A2 upper, but there was no sentimentality in divesting myself of that M9.