Remington 40 grain Golden Bullets, 100 plastic box, HSRN: fired and cycled 30/30 rounds. But a lot of difference.įor grins, I shot a magazine of Federal Auto Match into the dirt berm. In the off chance it being the first 10 rounds out of the gun using the Remington OR, and I say OR, the cold rained on old timer shooting it took 10 rounds to learn the trigger, I reshot the Remington as the fifth group on a separate target: The Rem40RNHS compared to the CCI Blazer 40RNHS puzzled me. These were the first 40 shots out of the gun. The four ammos were fired in order of the 1-2-3-4 numbers on the target. Sights were the factory front #2 and rear as assembled by Fritz Inspector 13 in Krautland at Umarex.Īll in all, a bunch in the aiming square as taken out of the box. 10 rounds of four ammos all on the same black 2"x2" square for impact comparison. Shot it at 25 yards rested over a bench on a soft pad two handed. That way light from other then level 6 O'Clock does not make a shadow and move impact here and there. Filled level the deep idiotic white dot holes in the front and rear sights with white finger nail polish. Stripped and lubed whatever a Glock shooter thought needed lubed. Random collection of steel and PLASTIC small parts where on 9mm they would be all steel.įor example, Safety left side lever is steel, but right side lever is plastic.Īdder 2: Spent money on the M9-22 version. The 92FS-22, M9-22, and M9A1-22 are all the same except for color (black/sand) and markings on the slide. one (1) magazine (true)(normal in some brands, but crummy when you have to buy a second one) Have to be filled level with white finger nail polish or are useless) both short and tall front sights to adjust elevation if needed (Plastic with white dots so deep they shadow. Not magnetic.)(Who Knows What It Will Mean) steel insert that makes the "slide rails" in the handle's plastic body (Turned out wrong info.
Big grip.Īdder: I did talk to a Beretta TechRep before looking again. Looked at a 92FS-22 sand color and a M9-22 black today.īut a Glock shooter is easily impressed by a single action trigger.