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The Wilson Combat Beretta Action Tune Kit I tapped, racked, and went to pull the trigger and got nothing…so I performed the same action three more times. The third time I watched a perfectly good round eject out of the pistol it occurred to me that I had accidentally engaged the safety during the first tap/rack/bang. On one rather embarrassing occasion I didn’t fully seat the magazine when I swapped magazines with the weapon still in the holster prior to a drill and when I got the beep I pulled the pistol and got one shot then a click. I vastly prefer the decocker-only G model pistols to the standard FS equipped guns because performing immediate action drills with an FS often leads to unintentional activation of the safety. I solved that by installing the Wolff Trigger Control Unit for the 92 family of pistols in my guns.Įven though I like the 92 quite a bit, there are things about it I would change. The only issue I ever really had with the 92 was that the trigger return spring tended to break frequently if you attempted serious dryfire training. I’ve never had a feed-way stoppage with a 92 pistol, even when firing the gun in tropical storm conditions with a magazine that was packed with thick mud. The controls of the pistol all seem to be in just the right place.
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I have used the Beretta 92 quite a bit over the years and the specimens I own have always performed extremely well. If you are a regular reader of the site, you may have deduced that I have a certain fondness for the Beretta 92 pistol.