I have used your products for several years. In the couple of times I have contacted your customer service, they were friendly and ready to help. Your whole company was ready to help and they friendly and very courteous. I feel bad that your company and employees had to deal with a not so courteous customer. This video proves how friendly, courteous, and out to simply please the customer you are, thank you!
Thanks. We've had a couple customers run into heavy trigger pulls that were nothing more than a lack of proper lubrication. Thus the need for this video.
Very important to oil there but There's no reason to disassemble. Just put 2 drops in that area it will find its way in-between the connector and bar .
Thank you! I had started noticing that the trigger was feeling, maybe a little heavier but a noticeably jerky after a few trips to the range, subsequent cleanings and hundreds and hundreds of dry fires. A Glock trigger is already a bit of a challenge compared to some, but it was harder and harder to get that nice smooth trigger press without the trigger catching. A little lube down in there made a world of difference.
Considering all the photos I’ve seen showing a little bit of lube in that area, but never knowing the specific part they’re suggesting I oil, I would have expected a more zoomed in shot of exactly where you’re specifying for noobs like me, but oh well.
I always knew to lube that point you mentioned, but didn’t think it is at all necessary to remove that pin to do so. I put a small drop of oil right on that spot, one on each frame rail & that’s it (slide gets lubed separately) Am I doing it wrong?
That doessn’t mean much. It’s recommended lubrication for all Glocks. I’ll try to find factory instructions, but that’s one major area I was taught to ALWAYS lube on Glocks.
The Glock lube myth drives me insane. I was trained to shoot operate qualify about everything during Vietnam time frame, US Army. If you over lube a glock...(1) It won't explode (2) you haven't damaged it (3) you don't need to hold your head in shame (4) it won't attract dirt (unless you put in the dirt and shovel dirt on it). However it doesn't take much lube. so use less.. if you use more... don't tell a "Glock" enthusiast they will act like you castrated your child. I try to avoid them. I like Glocks, M1911s etc. I watched a guy show me on YT how to lube a Glock without over lubing. The idiot used far more Lube than I would heavily lubing. Enjoy your life, buy Glocks, Over lube them Like I do!!! Just to Fk with them!!! You will be just fine!!! You bought the Glock, lube it like you want to.
@@wolfgangholtzclaw2637 I wonder if all of our branches learned the same way? I’m guessing that if it’s a desert, snow, or jungle war, the requirements are probably different? I wonder if the lawyers tell manufacturers to not put out videos?
I have used your products for several years. In the couple of times I have contacted your customer service, they were friendly and ready to help. Your whole company was ready to help and they friendly and very courteous. I feel bad that your company and employees had to deal with a not so courteous customer. This video proves how friendly, courteous, and out to simply please the customer you are, thank you!
Thanks. We've had a couple customers run into heavy trigger pulls that were nothing more than a lack of proper lubrication. Thus the need for this video.
Very important to oil there but There's no reason to disassemble. Just put 2 drops in that area it will find its way in-between the connector and bar .
Well, occasionally (depends on how much you shot) one should clean and lubricate just like it is demonstrated in the video. Cheers!
Thank you! I had started noticing that the trigger was feeling, maybe a little heavier but a noticeably jerky after a few trips to the range, subsequent cleanings and hundreds and hundreds of dry fires. A Glock trigger is already a bit of a challenge compared to some, but it was harder and harder to get that nice smooth trigger press without the trigger catching. A little lube down in there made a world of difference.
So to be clear.... should we lubricate it?
I use cooper grease for high temp for this point, it just last longer.
Considering all the photos I’ve seen showing a little bit of lube in that area, but never knowing the specific part they’re suggesting I oil, I would have expected a more zoomed in shot of exactly where you’re specifying for noobs like me, but oh well.
Ha, I love it. This wasn't born from a certain email chain with a fired customer was it? 🤘🏼
We can neither confirm, nor deny any relationship to said blog post.
Good info, thanks
I always knew to lube that point you mentioned, but didn’t think it is at all necessary to remove that pin to do so. I put a small drop of oil right on that spot, one on each frame rail & that’s it (slide gets lubed separately)
Am I doing it wrong?
When you guys bringing back the freedom edition trigger for gen 5??????????????!??
Where to I put the oil if I have the Glock performance trigger installed?
sweet tip thx
I would suggest using some type of grease in this application because the grease will stay in place much longer.Great video and suggestion
Red line grease for camshaft are okay ? 🙄
If I haven’t done this should I repolish contact points and then get lubin?
The key point is the lubrication. Without it the trigger pull can dramatically increase from friction.
yes
i have literally NEVER done this... and have had exactly zero issues..
Well, consider yourself lucky. We've done the testing and not using lube has resulted in an increased trigger pull weight.
That doessn’t mean much. It’s recommended lubrication for all Glocks. I’ll try to find factory instructions, but that’s one major area I was taught to ALWAYS lube on Glocks.
With SEAL 1 CLP Plus® you can only shoot about 15K rounds in between applications. Just saying.
We recommend lubricating a firearm more frequently than once every 15,000 rounds. Just saying.
The Glock lube myth drives me insane. I was trained to shoot operate qualify about everything during Vietnam time frame, US Army. If you over lube a glock...(1) It won't explode (2) you haven't damaged it (3) you don't need to hold your head in shame (4) it won't attract dirt (unless you put in the dirt and shovel dirt on it). However it doesn't take much lube. so use less.. if you use more... don't tell a "Glock" enthusiast they will act like you castrated your child. I try to avoid them. I like Glocks, M1911s etc. I watched a guy show me on YT how to lube a Glock without over lubing. The idiot used far more Lube than I would heavily lubing. Enjoy your life, buy Glocks, Over lube them Like I do!!! Just to Fk with them!!! You will be just fine!!! You bought the Glock, lube it like you want to.
There are so many 'correct' ways to CLP, on TH-cam, have you ever seen any uploaded by the manufacturers?
Nope, I got trained US Army style the brunt of all manufacturing. @@SmittyAZ
@@wolfgangholtzclaw2637 I wonder if all of our branches learned the same way? I’m guessing that if it’s a desert, snow, or jungle war, the requirements are probably different?
I wonder if the lawyers tell manufacturers to not put out videos?
@@wolfgangholtzclaw2637 I stand corrected. CZ USA does put out maintenance videos.
no biggy to me... still dipping my Glock in axle grease!!!@@SmittyAZ
😁👍