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 | | Manufacturer: | Beretta | | Model: | M9A1-1 | | Action: | Double/Single | | MSRP: | $725.00 | | Gun Type: | pistol | | Barrel: | 4.9 | | Overall Length: | 8.5 | | Weight: | 35.3 | | Finish: | Black | | Sights: | DOT and POST |
| From www.berettausa.com
| | It’s not an official title, but it perfectly describes the Beretta 92FS. Selected by a multi-national roster of defense and law enforcement organizations, each pistol must pass a battery of more then 3,000 quality control check and measure that includes complete interchangeability of parts before leaving the factory... and proven in the field in countless defensive confrontations, the 92FS is in all respects the “ultimate”. |  |  | | Would you recommend this gun? |  | Yes (16 Votes) |  | No (18 Votes) |
| | Model | Item | Action | Sights | Grips | Caliber | Total Length | Barrel Height | Capacity | Weight | MSRP |  | M9A1 | JS92M9A1M | Double/Single | DOT&POST | Black | 9mm | 8.5 | 4.9 | 15 | 35.3 | $725.00 | |  | M9A1 | JS92M9A1M | Double/Single | DOT&POST | Black | 9mm | 8.5 | 4.9 | 10 | 35.3 | $725.00 | |
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 | Questions and Answers |
by Yahoo Answers: | → | →beretta 92 fs ?...FFL dealers please help? | | 2006-08-09 22:37:51 | | Im looking to buy a 92 fs, my ffl dealer goes through JSC jerry sports center, and they list a beretta s 92 fs and a berreta 92 fs, the only difference that the s92fs is over $50 less. it is not stainless of "inox" style...both look the same. if you know the difference please help | | Answered By: shootingsportsnw |  |
| | The JSC catalog list the s92fs as Made In Italy the other is US made. |  |
| → | →What is the cheapest and best way to re-blue a Beretta 92 FS pistol? | | 2007-02-08 19:53:42 | | I just bought a Beretta 92 FS pistol and it has some holster wear especially on the rear sights. What is the cheapeast and best way to cover it up / re-blue it? | | Answered By: Wood and Gun Guy |  |
| | It really depends on what you are looking for......For the high gloss "pretty" finish, you are limited to a gunsmith, or if you are meticulous you can do a reasonable job with cold bluing.
I would clean/degrease the firearm (brake cleaner works very well...only use on metal!) then apply a quality cold-blue according to the directions (I like Outers brand). Plish with some XXF steel wool and re-oil. This is the cheapest method, and the results may surprize you. If you are unhappy with the results, you are only out 6 bucks for the bluing....you can always have a gunsmith strip and reblue after you've tried it.
If you want the "Tactical" look, I would have the gun mediablasted then cold blue....gives a matte finish that I really like.
or
Have the gun parkerized (or do it yourself...there are kits/info available on the net)
or
Look into two products called Armacoat and Duracoat. These are fantastic coatings for guns, come in colours from black to grey to olive drab green. More durable than factory blue, and less than 40 bucks for the kit.
Hope this helps! |  |
| → | →beretta 92 rear sight adjusment? | | 2006-10-13 13:37:22 | | anyone know how too adjust the rear sight i purchased a used 92, and wasnt included in the kit or do i just have really bad a** aim ;) | | Answered By: bound |  |
| | Bound's hubby here:
Chances are very good that your Beretta 92 has fixed sights. If this is the case, your pistol should be sighted close to point of aim at 25 yards with service ball ammo (likely 124 grain FMJ RN).
First, there should be an index mark on the top of the slide near the rear sight ... make sure the notch of the rear sight is centered on this index mark.
Second, test fire your pistol (single action) over sandbags at dinner sized paper plates at 25 yards with 124 grain FMJ. Use both hands, resting your wrists and the grip on the sandbags. Coc k hte hammer by hand, and gently squeeze the trigger. Fire several 5 round clips in this process. The more you do this, the tighter your groups will become. Do not coc k the hammer by squeezing the trigger ... this will ruin any groups you try to make.
Third, analyze your target. It will tell you what you are doing wrong.
a) If your shots are low, you are jerking the trigger and pushing the muzzle of the pistol down in anticipation of recoil.
b) If your shots group around left of center, you do not have enough finger on the trigger.
c) If your pistol groups around right of center, you have too much finger on the trigger.
d) If your pistol groups high, you may not be "locking" your wrist and elbow.
When you prepare to shoot, place the pistol in your shooting hand. With you hand open, place the pistol in the web of your hand, with the barrel in line with the center line of your forearm. If you hold the pistol improperly, your shots will go too far left or right of center. Also, if you have failures to feed or eject, you may not be locking your elbow or wrist.
Shooting a pistol well takes work. You jsut do not pick it up, load it, and pull the trigger. Your Beretta should group about a 4" circle at 25 yards, and about 6" at 50 yards. This pistol is currently being accurized by the Marines and Army for national match competition, it is capable of exceptional accuracy! |  |
| → | →is thare much differance batween a Beretta 92 and Taurus 92 ? | | 2007-04-27 19:54:36 | | I know cost taurus is cheaper by at least $50
...... but realy how much better if any is the beretta over the taurus ? | | Answered By: corp20022 |  |
| | The Taurus as far as I know is a copy of the Beretta M92FS. I fired my stepdad's beretta and liked it so I decided I wanted to get a pistol too. When I bought my first pistol I chose the Beretta because of peoples good reviews of the Beretta. I had also heard bad reviews from people that owned Taurus handguns and had ot return em because they broke. For quality I took the Beretta M92FS home and it never failed. Friends that I let fire the pistol said they liked it too so I recomend looking at the Beretta but the end decision is still up to you.
Beretta can be easily used in both right and left hands. The Beretta's safety switch can be activated on either side of the pistol to accomidate right and left handed shooters. If you are left handed the magazine release button can also be switched over to go on the left or right to accomidate you. There are other manufacturers that can do that as well.
Some gunshops may have used pistols too so look at other manufacturers and see what pistol feels good in your hand and that you can feel comfortable with the pistol that means alot when picking a handgun. |  |
| → | →I jammed my Beretta 92 FS. HELP!!? | | 2008-02-02 16:29:37 | | I loaded a 9mm round with no gun powder in the round. Cocked the gun and is now jammed. I tried to disassemble the gun, but everything i do does not work. I cant cock the gun back either.
Does anyone know how i can get the bullet out?? Please Help!! Thank you.
yes, it was a bullet with a casing with no powder (100% sure) but i dont think the rod is working. i cant even field strip it
I FIXED IT!!! i could not cock the slide back, so i pried open with a screw driver and then finally it released the slide, and i was able to pull the bullet out. turns out the casing had expanded because it was a fired round. lol i know i know, ima idiot. thanks for all your help guys! poice! | | Answered By: CIH(Ret) |  |
| | Thye best advice I can give you is to tell you to take it to your local gunsmith. If you keep fiddling wiht it, you could damage something and then it will cost more to fix it than it will to get it unjammed. |  |
| → | →please ..... glock 19 or beretta 92 or sig sawer (comparaison table pls ) its so hard to choose help me....... | | 2008-01-12 07:32:28 | | | Answered By: Maker |  |
| | Opposite of Bobbo, I love Glocks. They are consistent, simple and easy to use. Plus, because of their design, they have faster trigger reset, less muzzle flip due to the lower slide, and an always the same trigger. Once you learn the trigger, and how to take up the stages, you will have in essence a 5.5lb, little creep, little movement, to place rounds exactly where you want them.
Both of the other guns work well. One of the most notable differences between the three is how the hammer trigger system works. With the Glock every trigger pull is the same. mid length, with little weight until just before the final stage which is mid weight.. With the Sig the first trigger pull is heavy and long, with the following trigger pull's light and short. The Beretta is the same as the Sig.
The Glock has no manual safety. It has several automatic safeties but nothing you have to do before you fire. (Unless you have no round in the chamber, or magazine inserted, but you have not pulled the slide back.) The Sig has no manual external safety either but does have a decock lever that allows you to safely lower the hammer, on a loaded chamber, without firing the gun. The Beretta has a decock/safety lever. The lever lowers the hammer safely but also disconnects the trigger from firing firing the weapon.
The Glock is the smallest and slimmest of the bunch. The Sig has the widest grips, the Beretta is the biggest overall. (Note you didn't actually say which Sig so I'm guessing 226/228 maybe 239?)
The Glock has a square Grip that I feel lends well to shooting as it is easy to tell where the gun is pointed in my hand. The Beretta and Sig have "rounder" grips.
When I watch newer people shoot this is what I typically see. Beretta, forget to take the saftey off. Waste the first shot due to heavy pull. Sig, waste the first shot due to heavy pull. Glock shoot gun. Beretta forget to decock. Sig forget to decock, Glock ... ughh it's already safe. As my buddy said, "The Glock really is a point and click device."
All the guns are high quality. Mags are cheap for the Glock ($13-$19) and the Beretta($13-$19) Sig mags are upwards of $45.
Hope that helps. |  |
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