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All Comments (161)
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Just in case you haven't gotten a satisfactory answer yet, I have the same pistol; you have to use some force and push the guide rod hard, toward the front of the weapon or muzzle, and then the disc on the guide rod will move back just enough to allow it to fit. It does take a bit of force, so you really need to crank on it. If you have delicate fingers it may hurt a little, but you'll get used to it.
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WOW you are a Dumbass!!! Pass the glock on to a real man!!!
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YOU GOTTA BE KIDDING RIGHT ???? AND GET A FUCKIN HAIRCUT !!!! LOOKZ LIKE YOU HAVE PUBES GROWIN ON UR HEAD !
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I'm glad you figured it out 'cause I don't know, but nice gun.
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lol dumass why take it apart if you don't know how to put it back lmao
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you should tell them please feel free to post constructive comments. sorry there are ignorant people every where. anything worth doing is worth doing right but some times you have to do it wrong until you learn how.
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@cwalk1012012 Stupid is misuse of a possessive pronoun rather than a proper contraction when accusing someone else of stupidity.
As in "Holy shit you're stupid."
Dumbass.
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Load it and point it at your nutts. That will solve it!
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i am having a similar problem, however my recoil spring does not stay seated in the semi-circle on the barrel. Upon field strip the recoil spring consistently pop's up to the position you were showing in the beginning of the video.
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the problem is you own that gun
I did not read all the comments so pardon me if you've already figured this out. On all my glocks I need to slightly depress the spring in order for it to fit in the correct location. It looked like you were trying to place it without compressing the spring a bit.
phillychoppin 2 years ago 7
Hey Demcad, The guide rod will go through the hole in the slide. It will fit if you just push it through. Everytime the guns fired the rod extends into that hole.
Take Care~
sootch00 2 years ago 6