even back in the 70's? Dammit man, never said I was right.Every LE qualification course I have ever seen has been at minimum 200 rounds.
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even back in the 70's? Dammit man, never said I was right.Every LE qualification course I have ever seen has been at minimum 200 rounds.
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Yes.even back in the 70's? Dammit man, never said I was right.
Yes.
I don't know why anyone cares. Very few people will ever shoot enough rounds through a gun to wear it out. I personally never ask "round count" as I don't give a ****.Hell, either the guys bull ****ting or it was his personal, but why carry a gun ya don't shoot? oi
who was the instructor that had well over 100k rounds through it? Glock practically begged him.to give it up, replace small parts that need replacing and keep ticking.I don't know why anyone cares. Very few people will ever shoot enough rounds through a gun to wear it out. I personally never ask "round count" as I don't give a ****.
As previous posters mentioned, collet bushings were an attempt to get a tighter fit without all the handwork involved in fitting a solid bushing. My Series 70 Gold Cup had one that shot fine for the first 2 years I had it, but rumors at the time persisted that the collet fingers would break at the most inopportune times (I never personally met anyone who had this happen). When I had the gun tightened up, I went ahead and had my gunsmith fit a match bushing to it (he insisted) and it has shot great ever since. I'm still partial to the Series 70s, as they don't have the firing pin safety of the Series 80s that makes it harder to achieve a good trigger pull.