![]() ![]() The one and only time I know for a fact limp wristing was an issue is when my wife shot my G42 she would shoot it and the round would not eject. I think it was a $10 part and a 5 min repair. I was getting some pretty erratic ejection though I could see some coming over the top and falling to the left side. Had a couple stove pipes but it still functioned most of the time. It could have been from letting the gun slam shut on a empty chamber I don't really know. I once chipped the extractor on my G17 Gen 4. Another one, "it's only Generation 'fill in the blank' that has problems, not other Glocks."Ĭlick to expand.The only other thing I can think of is to check your extractor for chips. I'm not counting that day in my 20,000 rounds." Nor any other day it messed up. One of us others will say, "hey, how about that day you were cussing it out because of stovepipes?" Glockphile answer, "Oh, that was just weak ammo. ![]() When all together talking old times, one of them will say how he's got 20,000 rounds through his Glock 17 with zero malfunctions. Oh, it's the ammo, or limp wristing, or bad springs, or this copper colored grease, or etc, ad nausium. It's just that my Glockoholic glochophile friends seem to believe every one of their malfunctions are not the fault of their Glock, but something else every time. The point is that all guns can malfunction, even Glocks, and Glocks aren't any better or worse at it than other brands. That's not much, quite honestly, but might be every 400 or so rounds. My Glock 19 is also Gen 3 and has more malfunctions than my 1911a models, on the average. ![]()
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