i am buying a used glock with minor issue , according to seller : " right side of trigger guard has been contoured slightly to prevent sharp edge on finger"
If it's for using, then it matters not at all. That sort of thing only has to do with collector value, which later Gen Glocks don't have much of anyway.
There is plenty of meat in that area. Common thing done to glocks. My Glock 40 has even more material removed in that area. No troubles at all. But yes it is permanent. Being that the frame is the "firearm". It's a glock though if it does not bother you when you grip it and the price is right buy it. If you want a pristine collector grade wait a day or two and I am sure you can find 2 or 3 million in such condition to choose from.
Could have been done smoother. And blended way better You oughta touch it up and blend it some more with 400 grit Then a final light hit with 600 grit.
Go light ... You cant put material back. Wont take much at all to make it look " professional" Now it looks like something a 3rd grader did.
And when you blend those lines yourself it will give you a sense you made vast appearance improvements over bubba,s amatuerish work.
Could have been done smoother. And blended way better You oughta touch it up and blend it some more with 400 grit Then a final light hit with 600 grit.
Go light ... You cant put material back. Wont take much at all to make it look " professional" Now it looks like something a 3rd grader did.
And when you blend those lines yourself it will give you a sense you made vast appearance improvements over bubba,s amatuerish work.
Could have been done smoother. And blended way better You oughta touch it up and blend it some more with 400 grit Then a final light hit with 600 grit.
Go light ... You cant put material back. Wont take much at all to make it look " professional" Now it looks like something a 3rd grader did.
And when you blend those lines yourself it will give you a sense you made vast appearance improvements over bubba,s amatuerish work.
Could have been done smoother. And blended way better You oughta touch it up and blend it some more with 400 grit Then a final light hit with 600 grit.
Go light ... You cant put material back. Wont take much at all to make it look " professional" Now it looks like something a 3rd grader did.
And when you blend those lines yourself it will give you a sense you made vast appearance improvements over bubba,s amatuerish work.
He got the $20 Gunwizard special.
Looks like it.
D- in contouring plastic for function and appearance for sure...
LOL!!!
PD can bring it up to an A with some very light sanding on those crude lines left on it.... He even reimprint some of the texturing somewhat matching the factory texturing. With a magnifying glass and very very light touching with a slighlty mashed and heated sewing needle point held with a pair of needle nose pliers.
Meticulous work begining from center to outside edges left of factory texture
Have ta have some OCD going on and ww2 1/35 scale model german armour building skills.
Otherwise than that. Just blending all them left over multi angle sanding lines would be GTG...