 Hey there friends, thanks for checking in. Those were my first shots with the Gearsan MC14 BDA. This was modeled after the Browning BDA and it is chambered in 380. It's a new release from Gearsan. It has an aluminum frame 3.8 inch barrel and a 13 round magazine budget price. You're looking at between $330 and $350 for this handgun. And I think it offers a lot. Check out the trigger. It's a double action, single action and double action. Not bad, but the single action pull is breaking right at four pounds with a short reset. Three dot metal sights. As I mentioned, 3.8 inch barrel. It has polymer grips there with the Gearsan logo right there. I think that's pretty sharp looking with that logo and the magazine ejection is pretty strong. I like the aluminum frame and then the 380 ACP is on the more expensive side. However, I was able to find three boxes of freedom munitions buried deep in my safe. This has an ambidextrous thumb safety. All right, it does not have a decocker, but just swipe down and you are good to go. Very simple disassemble. All you do is push the button on that side, take this lever and off comes the slide from the frame. Get a load of those walls on the slide rather thick. Here we have an uncaptured recoil spring 3.8 inch barrel. All right, and there goes the guide rod. But you just reassemble it back into working order. I like what Gearsan did with this. It's very easy and you can see the frame there, aluminum frame, it weighs just 29 ounces loaded. And then you just put it back together the same way in reverse order. Even at $350, which is the higher end, I think this handgun's worth it. With the aluminum frame and the light recoil that 380 offers, I think it's pretty nice. Has a nice feel, three finger contact on the grip. Black Syracote frame and slide. Let me load it up again. Let's see how I do one-handed. I want you to take note though. See that little red tab there? That's the extractor sticking out a little bit. Loaded chamber indicator. Thumb safety, just sweep down. One-handed, let's start with the rabbit. Not bad. Not bad. It's a pretty smooth shooting handgun. I have to tell you with the aluminum frame and the 380, 3.8 inch barrel, all steel guide rod, not sure I mentioned that. Easy disassembled, nice single action trigger pull. Let me turn the camera around. You can see what little recoil it offers. All right, so I have around loaded. The extractor's sticking out a little bit. I have it in double action. Let's shoot a couple in double action here. We're going with just the tombstone. Let's go with the circle there. Let's go with the small silhouette. And we'll go with the rabbit. Rabbit's very thin. Nice. Wow. For a budget price gun, this is really nice. I like it. That it's easy to light recoil spring, easy to rack. It's not super light, but light enough where weaker hands could rack it. Some people on my table review said this reminded them of the Beretta Cheetah. I can't necessarily make that comparison. The Cheetah's a little bit larger. Well, a 3.9 inch barrel versus a 3.8. But it kind of looks the same. If you look at the Browning BDA and 380, you'll see that this is almost a direct copy and a fraction of the cost. I really liked the way this shoots. And it's not like I had to do anything out of the case. And with the price of 380, I didn't necessarily wanted to learn the gun and go through two boxes. I was able to just go ahead and load it up and shoot the gun. And it is really nice. It has some vertical serrations in the back strap and the front strap. Nice ejection with the magazine. Comes with one 13-round magazine. I'd like to see them double it up. But at a price right around $340, hey, what can you expect? It does come with a plastic case, though. The Gearsan FC-14 BDA. Nice little shooting, 380, very low recoil. And I certainly enjoyed it with my first time at the range. If you like videos like this, please subscribe and share. I always appreciate thumbs up button. Thanks for watching, and you guys be safe.