During annual inspections... I came across a EDP that was BENT... inside an otherwise functioning Glock 22.
Anyone ever seen this? ...how common? ...any guesses on causation?!?!
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During annual inspections... I came across a EDP that was BENT... inside an otherwise functioning Glock 22.
Anyone ever seen this? ...how common? ...any guesses on causation?!?!
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Never have seen one and I've worked on a few thousand Glock pistols.
Chief Armorer for Elite Shooting Sports in Manassas VA
Chief Armorer for Corp Arms (FFL 07-08/SOT 02)
If I'm thinking of the right part, there can't be that much room for it to bend.
Any way you can post a photo? I'd love to see it, and show it to other armorers at my department.
How was the gun otherwise? Round count? Is the owner/officer squared away with maintenance? Age of the gun, etc.
The advice above is worth exactly what you paid for it.
I thought it was a more than a little odd.
see pics -attached. (the post-it notes are there to hold the EDP in the correct position near the ruler)
It appears kind of slight here... but is especially obvious when the EDP rolls on a flat surface.
... not that I have seen thousands of Glocks... (but maybe the same couple of dozen several times!)
Either way - replaced w/ SP00112 for $3.
Might have been bent from the factory when new.
Chief Armorer for Elite Shooting Sports in Manassas VA
Chief Armorer for Corp Arms (FFL 07-08/SOT 02)
I wonder if he used that pin to help with further breakdown of the gun (frame pins)?
Gotm4 - yes... this is my best guess after thinking about it for a minute. Of course this would mean that factory QC "fell down" at some point... and I guess the spring on the end helped to 'smooth out' the curvature of the rod so that the whole EDP Assembly (rod, spring and bearing) was less noticable / within tolerances for the part design.
Javentre - ummmm... possibly. I haven't interrogated the officer yetbut it seems unlikely / outside of a plausible sequence:
One has to field strip first (no tools required)... THEN you have to remove the slide cover plate USING a pin punch or some sort of tool to apply pressure on the firing pin spacer sleeve IN ORDER to GET TO the EDP rod inside the slide. Even then, it's size / shape doesn't make for a good tool.
Could this also happen if the extractor was repeatedly forced to work overtime? For example, if someone were to consistently slam the slide forward on an already chambered round, forcing the extractor to ride over the case rim at full speed. Over. And Over. And over again.
Just a hypothesis...
The advice above is worth exactly what you paid for it.
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