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Bolsa gunsmithing?

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  • #31
    Ignatius
    Member
    • Oct 2017
    • 163

    I don’t recommend Bolsa Gunsmithing, they screwed up big time on a simple floorplate fitting for my C96 Broomhandle pistol.

    Do yourself a favor and do not go this place for delicate and precise gunsmithing.

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    • #32
      Che762x39
      Veteran Member
      • Aug 2011
      • 4538

      They had my Browning Hi-Power for a complex fix, a broken locking cam.

      Dropped it off in November 2019 and picked it up January 2020. I was pleased.

      I also noted a S&W 25-2 in their used gun section for $795 and I wish I bought it.

      Overall very nice shop and staff.

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      • #33
        Title1guy
        Senior Member
        • Aug 2015
        • 1381

        They looked over my Beretta 21A, which wasn't cycling properly. They cleaned it up, test fired it and it works fine now.

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        • #34
          StandardFinn
          Member
          • Feb 2020
          • 236

          Honey just buy the LTT trigger job in a bag - watch YouTube videos and learn how your gun works. I can completely disassemble a 92FS in 3min and put it back together in 5.

          If you run into problems you can always take it to someone, or send it to Bolsa after. For the good of future humans, you owe it to yourself to learn a new skill. Don't be afraid, teach yourself how to do it.

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          • #35
            Ignatius
            Member
            • Oct 2017
            • 163

            Originally posted by Che762x39
            They had my Browning Hi-Power for a complex fix, a broken locking cam.

            Dropped it off in November 2019 and picked it up January 2020. I was pleased.

            I also noted a S&W 25-2 in their used gun section for $795 and I wish I bought it.

            Overall very nice shop and staff.
            You probably had John, who seems to be the most experienced pistol smith in Bolsa Gunsmithing to do your work.

            I was not fortunate enough to have John work on my Broomhandle Mauser, it was a new gunsmith, I forgot to ask for his name, but he was a big guy with a red shirt it might have been Joe or Jason.

            I did a Yelp review on 3/17/2021 on realizing how shoddy the work was when I did a closer inspection at home:

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            • #36
              Mike-4
              Senior Member
              • Aug 2004
              • 792

              I had them do a bbl swap for a S&W 66 as they are an authorized S&W Repair Center. 3 week turnaround, happy with the job.
              NRA Benefactor Member

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              • #37
                Killer Bee
                Senior Member
                • Feb 2010
                • 2197

                Originally posted by StandardFinn
                Honey just buy the LTT trigger job in a bag - watch YouTube videos and learn how your gun works. I can completely disassemble a 92FS in 3min and put it back together in 5.

                If you run into problems you can always take it to someone, or send it to Bolsa after. For the good of future humans, you owe it to yourself to learn a new skill. Don't be afraid, teach yourself how to do it.
                after what, losing your life when your gun malfunctions defending yourself? that's great advice for kids toys, antique tools, etc. but necessarily the best advice for a tool that your life may depend on.

                and btw, I'm quite familiar with the m9 myself.. carried from our adoption in mid 90's to my retirement in 09 where I was the armory supervisor.. also own 2 of my own.. I'm a heavy junk mechanic by trade, a damn good one btw and quite capable of tear down and reassemblely.. but I still prefer a trained professional perform that kind of work on my personal guns just as we do in the military and as do police agencies, etc.
                I started out with nothing - and I still have most of it

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                • #38
                  CheapBloke
                  Banned
                  • Feb 2019
                  • 3115

                  Originally posted by StandardFinn
                  Honey just buy the LTT trigger job in a bag - watch YouTube videos and learn how your gun works. I can completely disassemble a 92FS in 3min and put it back together in 5.

                  If you run into problems you can always take it to someone, or send it to Bolsa after. For the good of future humans, you owe it to yourself to learn a new skill. Don't be afraid, teach yourself how to do it.
                  So they can end up like you?

                  Originally posted by StandardFinn
                  This will be a lengthy post, but the CG's community's help would be fantastic.



                  Went to the range today with a girlfriend of mine who is active duty Navy and shoots often (and is a confident shooter). I brought my Beretta 92FS that I had installed the Langdon Tactical NP3 Trigger system + full internal parts replacement in, as well as a custom fabricated flat-faced trigger (which I have another thread about). The LTT kit with the NP3 coating makes this gun run extremely smooth and it has a very short reset. I hadn't shot the gun since I installed it as they didn't include a safety lever roll pin and I couldn't attach it for a few weeks so this was my first day at the range after the install.



                  Disclosure: I function checked this gun multiple times before going to the range and everything was in order. The reset was short, tactile and very sharp.



                  At the range, I wanted to shoot first to make sure everything was running as expected before I handed my friend a gun I worked on and set the pistol down with the slide back and no magazine in the gun so she could come up and load a magazine and safely shoot.



                  As she's shooting, I'm back against the wall on the bench reloading the magazine I just emptied and hear a pop-pop and the RO taps me and points to her, her eyes are wide O_O and I was confused, then the person in the booth next to my friend says "we fired at the same time!". So I nodded my head and kept reloading. My friend (clearly knew something was up) but kept shooting and this time I heard pop-pop-pop and I looked up and the RO was talking to her. My gun was burst firing.



                  Now, when I went through my first 10 rounds the reset was extremely short and trigger pull was light (which I expected out of the LTT NP3 coated parts). I did not experience a burst fire. There was another RO there instructing someone a few lanes over who also came over to see what was going on. I explained the LTT kit, my flat faced trigger and he function checked the gun and asked me to shoot another magazine through. I went through the second magazine and this time I did get a two-round burst fire. So, I emptied my remaining magazines into boxes and started racking my brain as to what would be causing this.



                  On the range bench I pulled my gun apart, took my trigger out, put the stock trigger back in with the stock trigger reset spring. The reset was a lot stiffer and more tactile instantly. I shot a 10-rd magazine through the gun with no burst fire and then handed the gun to my friend who again shot a few rounds and then experienced a burst of two rounds. We put the gun away at this point and plinked away with my Sig Mosquito which if anyone is wondering, is the best malfunction training machine.



                  Once we were done and back in the lobby I went to speak to the RO who was giving the lesson as he left before I put the stock trigger back in to test. Another gentleman was behind the counter the RO(who was giving the lesson) referred to as a "beretta guy" and said he should inspect my gun. He looked at it and went to put a few magazines through it to test the function. He came back and he said "there's nothing wrong with the gun, I was able to induce a burst fire, but it was my fault as I was creeping the reset." He likened the LTT NP3 kit to giving a 16yr old who just got their license a ferrari and said that it is a very custom and highly tuned system. But in the end felt that it was not a malfunction, but user induced.



                  So I'm home now, and wondering what the f*** I should do about this. Part of me doesn't want to experience this again and I want to send the kit back to LTT. Part of me is wondering if while I was doing all the custom flat faced trigger fitting if I didn't wear the sh** out of my trigger reset spring causing it to be so weak that inducing a "bump style" burst fire with a handgun is possible. Part of me is wondering if I need to simply stick the stock sear spring back into the gun and it will solve this issue...part of me is wondering if there's something wrong with the fitiment of the kit and I need the gun to be inspected and tested by a local gunsmith.



                  What does the CalGuns community think is the issue here, what is causing a burst fire? Please keep it professional and thank you for listening/your help.

                  Comment

                  • #39
                    fastpowerstroker
                    Member
                    • Feb 2009
                    • 420

                    Good prices but long wait times because they a
                    have a large backlog

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