I worked on the front face, moving the foremost part over to the bottom-left. Notice how the foremost part of the ejector is on the top-right, viewed from the shooter's perspective.Īnd this is what I did after 15 minutes on a whet stone. I have no instruction on this at all- I just sort of did what seemed like the logical thing to do.īelow is the ejector as it was originally. Last night I finally got around to trying my hand at ejector tuning. The casings seem to be scraping just enough to throw them off their proper path. They are not big scraped, which (at least I think) supports the fact that ejection is strong, but not where it is supposed to be. I have taken note of some mild triangular scrapes on my brass, indicating it is hitting the ejection port. This actually seemed to make the situation worse. To remedy the situation, I tried by polishing the sides of the extractor. Ejection seems strong for the most part- it's just that it is strong right back between my eyes fairly regularly. I started shooting it and after about 800 rounds I began noticing I was taking a lot of casings to the face. It had been shot, but obvious not very much- original anti-seize was still present in certain areas. I had to say used, "pre-owned" may be a better term. Backstory: I picked up a used Glock 19 Gen 3 with a PUS-series serial number.
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