Does anyone know of a good reputable stipple company in the area looking to have a Glock 19 undercut and stippled.
I do my own as I have smaller hand and sometimes do mods to make a grip fit me better...or to help give a grip a little bit more 'adhesive' when in the grip, but only to those pistols that I believe I will keep for the rest of my life as stippling can change how people view its value if you ever try to sell it, some may like it, others not. Keeping in mind that 'beauty' is in the eye of the beholder and what you might like as far as looks can be a complete turn-off to someone else!Does anyone know of a good reputable stipple company in the area looking to have a Glock 19 undercut and stippled.
Don't do it. You'll kill the resale value. Nobody will want that gun after being messed with like that. Even a "professional" job is altering the thinest grip that Glock could possibly get away with.
Talon grips, if you must. My advice is to train to shoot that pistol in the stock configuration.
Don't know what model you are speaking of, but Gen 5's have an "improved" grip texture.
I've heard that argument a thousand times before, and from as many people...Don't do it. You'll kill the resale value. Nobody will want that gun after being messed with like that.
Glock will come out with a Gen 6 one day. They will be innovative
The grip is thicker than you think. And the rate at which it melts to make the imprint doesn't happen in milliseconds. It's definitely a tedious task and someone with ADHD probably isn't the best person to sit down and try their hand at it. It takes more effort than you think to go through the grip with the iron. You don't have to be SUPER careful but you can't just go hamfisting it either.Let's just go ahead and put your stippled/undercut Glocks up for sale in the classifieds.
Hopefully, none were so heavily altered that the pistol's integrity have been compromised. How does even a professional know exactly where to stop with the soldering iron or dremel?
If they end up selling at all, let us see what they actually do sell for...
Glock will come out with a Gen 6 one day. They will be innovative and great. Or maybe you'll decide you must try an MOS version to try optics?
You will eventually want a new one of some sort, so don't kill your stock pistol for the next guy with unrecoverable "customizations."
Let's just go ahead and put your stippled/undercut Glocks up for sale in the classifieds.
Hopefully, none were so heavily altered that the pistol's integrity have been compromised. How does even a professional know exactly where to stop with the soldering iron or dremel?
If they end up selling at all, let us see what they actually do sell for...
Glock will come out with a Gen 6 one day. They will be innovative and great. Or maybe you'll decide you must try an MOS version to try optics?
You will eventually want a new one of some sort, so don't kill your stock pistol for the next guy with unrecoverable "customizations."
Don’t take it so personally when someone disagrees with you, lol. If people lived by this thought process, NOBODY would be altering their firearms, cars, motorcycles, houses, airplanes, or Jazzy Chairs, lol. Don’t think stippling is for you? Great, then don’t do it. But for someone else who didn’t ask if they SHOULD stipple their gun but instead asked WHERE to get it stippled, maybe respecting their decision and providing information pertinent to the discussion would stop thread derailments like this…