@@K499-w9cwhat metal pieces are you talking about lol I put oil on the “metal pieces” that mattered. Too much oil causes things to gum up. There is no need for oil on any of the trigger because it will get gritty. Where the frame meets the slide got oiled. If you want make a video cleaning your gun and tag me. I’ll gladly learn your way. If this was a 1911 I would go crazy with oil. It’s a Glock I can fill it with dirt and it will work. The barrel was soaked in oil, the connector and slide lock on my guns stay dry
I do pretty much the same procedure after every firing of each gun, sometimes takes longer than the time I spent firing them! But it's worth it. (Oh yeah, and I wear disposable gloves, it involves lead after all)
I could tell this his first time
Sorry bro been cleaning guns for 20 plus years but yes first time talking at the same time sorry it didn’t impress you.
@Bay state outdoors I like your video you doing basic cleaning
@@Baystateoutdoors762 did you put oil on the metal pieces
@@K499-w9cwhat metal pieces are you talking about lol I put oil on the “metal pieces” that mattered. Too much oil causes things to gum up. There is no need for oil on any of the trigger because it will get gritty. Where the frame meets the slide got oiled. If you want make a video cleaning your gun and tag me. I’ll gladly learn your way. If this was a 1911 I would go crazy with oil. It’s a Glock I can fill it with dirt and it will work. The barrel was soaked in oil, the connector and slide lock on my guns stay dry
@@Baystateoutdoors762 so it's safe to oil frame metal pieces???
💯💯
Thank you so much for the comment
I do pretty much the same procedure after every firing of each gun, sometimes takes longer than the time I spent firing them! But it's worth it. (Oh yeah, and I wear disposable gloves, it involves lead after all)
Yea I clean them even if I only fire a few rounds. Just carrying a gun and not firing them seems to dirty them up pretty good.
What gen is this Glock?
That is a gen 4