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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
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Gun Porn Thread!!!
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<blockquote data-quote="MarcSpaz" data-source="post: 15732850" data-attributes="member: 183445"><p>Yeah 10mm not cheap for sure. I was practically crying when I had to do it with my 40 cal.</p><p></p><p>If I was going to guess as to why it is what it is, I think it's just the way the barrels wear in. I think there's a predictable amount of wear that initially occurs. It may have something to do with plating or machining the barrel. So they zero the weapon for where they know the bullets will eventually hit.</p><p></p><p>I went through the same thing with my very first Glock 17. It was shooting low and left and I thought for sure it was me. I'll let a buddy of mine try it and it was working great just not going where he was aiming. I got on his 45, and I was hitting bull's-eyes like a champ. So we just figured it was the weapon.</p><p></p><p>We were hanging out all day, so I figured I'd just keep sending rounds through it and I would adjust my point of aim... tinking I was going to get the sights fixed later on in the week. Once I put about 200 rounds through it I started to notice that the point of impact was coming closer and closer to the point of aim. So I intentionally ran another 200 rounds through it and by the time I was done with that 400 rounds I was almost perfectly Dead on.</p><p></p><p>So with all my other Glocks and my two SIGs, when they were shooting low left out of the box I decided to just run ammo through them until they were hitting the target where I was aiming. The shity part is the cost between $160 and $180 a handgun to make it happen.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="MarcSpaz, post: 15732850, member: 183445"] Yeah 10mm not cheap for sure. I was practically crying when I had to do it with my 40 cal. If I was going to guess as to why it is what it is, I think it's just the way the barrels wear in. I think there's a predictable amount of wear that initially occurs. It may have something to do with plating or machining the barrel. So they zero the weapon for where they know the bullets will eventually hit. I went through the same thing with my very first Glock 17. It was shooting low and left and I thought for sure it was me. I'll let a buddy of mine try it and it was working great just not going where he was aiming. I got on his 45, and I was hitting bull's-eyes like a champ. So we just figured it was the weapon. We were hanging out all day, so I figured I'd just keep sending rounds through it and I would adjust my point of aim... tinking I was going to get the sights fixed later on in the week. Once I put about 200 rounds through it I started to notice that the point of impact was coming closer and closer to the point of aim. So I intentionally ran another 200 rounds through it and by the time I was done with that 400 rounds I was almost perfectly Dead on. So with all my other Glocks and my two SIGs, when they were shooting low left out of the box I decided to just run ammo through them until they were hitting the target where I was aiming. The shity part is the cost between $160 and $180 a handgun to make it happen. [/QUOTE]
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