Kayaking; That's why my Glocks have Marine Spring cups or "Maritime Spring Cups" ($10.00 well spent) which don't allow water to slow the firing pin, in case pistol is dropped in the water and later needed.Excaliber wrote:cheezit wrote:and this is why they make tupperware guns.![]()
A Glock is the perfect water sports gun, and was my choice for years of canoeing and kayaking. If it gets wet in fresh water, field strip it, blow water out of the obvious spots, and put it out in the sun for about 30 minutes. If it was in salt water, run lots of fresh water over and through the field stripped parts and proceed as above. Run an oiled patch over the metal parts, and you're good to go again. They're hard to beat for this purpose.
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