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It's my understanding that the G44 is made both in Austria and here in the US, so if Glock can produce a serial number here in the US on a newly US manufactured slide to match the serial number on a newly US manufactured barrel and frame, then certainly they have the ability to produce any serial number they want on a bare newly US manufactured slide.The only reason it didn't end up that way was they reused the metal part of the old slide and the old barrel. Try getting a slide replaced on a regular GLOCK and see where you get.
PLEASE!
Yea, there's no way Glock is going to take the time to separate the $2 of polymer from the $3 steel insert, and then send it back to a customer, after it's been involved in a failure. No way. Delusional.And please correct me if I'm wrong, but replacing the polymer section of the G44 slide is not simply a matter of "popping" the polymer out of the steel insert and "popping" in a new polymer section, is it? If so I'd be completely shocked.
I beg to differ. I own a G19.3 that had a cracked slide. It was sent to GI and came back with a new slide with a different SN with an L, IIRC. I no longer own the replacement slide as I sold it and installed a optic aftermarket slide.Glock refuses to replace steel slides because none of those are breaking apart.
Just a take on it, wrong or right. Bite my head off will you. You guys can be so mean.
And this would be the 1st time I heard of Glock replacing a slide and stamping on the original serial number.
And so, you know for a fact that that is what they did or did not do? Didn't know you guys work there and know for sure. Or is this just the usual internet self-expert opinions that clog up the threads?
They did reuse the metal.
It's not "unnecessary angst"; it's a fact that some (many?) buyers will not buy a Glock with mismatched numbers, or alternatively, won't pay the same price as they would for a Glock with matched numbers. I've heard this from several different retailers, and asked them why it was so. They've told me that folks consider a Glock with mismatched numbers to have had a serious problem at some point in the past, such as a blown-up barrel, cracked slide, or damaged frame, and they just won't buy it unless it is priced significantly lower.All that unnecessary angst from others about a 'mismatched' FrankenGlock gun...
"Oh my God, the world is ending, the world is ending! The numbers won't match, in case 20 years down the road some collector wants to buy it!"
PLEASE.
OP: Glad to see they took care of it for you. Enjoy!
Thanks for posting, 'first I've heard of this.I beg to differ. I own a G19.3 that had a cracked slide. It was sent to GI and came back with a new slide with a different SN with an L, IIRC. I no longer own the replacement slide as I sold it and installed a optic aftermarket slide.
Noone's arguing; folks are merely stating their opinions on the subject, for after all, this is a discussion forum. Only those who favor Glock products seem to take offense to those with opinions that differ from theirs.WOW! all the arguing over how the OP's slide was repaired or replaced :duel:
The main thing is that Glock took care of the customer and returned a fully functional pistol to him.
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A harsh appraisal.Glock is one of the few manufacturers who are conceited enough to feel that they have to engrave serial numbers on parts that don't require it by law, .
(snip)Glock is one of the few manufacturers who are conceited enough to feel that they have to engrave serial numbers on parts that don't require it by law...
Understood, but since the US represents such a huge market to Glock and they're manufactured right here in this country where no such requirement exists, you'd think they'd end the unnecessary practice of serializing the frame, slide, and barrel on pistols manufactured and sold here in the US.(snip)
Well, they don't require it by law HERE, but Glock sells pistols in many countries besides the USA, and I've heard from some overseas users that pistol barrels require serial numbers in some other countries (kind of makes sense, as that's the part that actually touches and launches the bullet). These users were intrigued that U.S. citizens could mail- or internet-order barrels and have them delivered to our door, as that was definitely NOT an option where they resided.
You are correct in that a lot of European Countries, the slide and/or barrel are the serialized part of the firearm.(snip)
Well, they don't require it by law HERE, but Glock sells pistols in many countries besides the USA, and I've heard from some overseas users that pistol barrels require serial numbers in some other countries (kind of makes sense, as that's the part that actually touches and launches the bullet). These users were intrigued that U.S. citizens could mail- or internet-order barrels and have them delivered to our door, as that was definitely NOT an option where they resided.
Also a very valid point made. But who knows if and how many Glock pistols made in the USA are sold in other markets where all the serial numbers must be present.Understood, but since the US represents such a huge market to Glock and they're manufactured right here in this country where no such requirement exists, you'd think they'd end the unnecessary practice of serializing the frame, slide, and barrel on pistols manufactured and sold here in the US.
Tradition or not, there's no valid reason for a 100% fully functional Glock pistol with a serial number on a barrel or slide that differs from that which is engraved in the frame to suffer unnecessary devaluation, yet there it is. No other pistols that are manufactured here in the US are subjected to such instantanious loss of value under the same circumstance...