By accurizing, do you mean improving mechanical accuracy (mostly a barrel-to-slide fit question) or total accuracy?
No. Many match grade 1911s will have factory accuracy of 1.5" average shot groups at 25 yards, some even smaller.joed said:Can it be made accurate like a 1911?
Yes and no. Trigger polish jobs/parts replacement will improve the repeatability of the pistol but will not increase the inherent mechanical accuracy from the factory. Not sure if you are wanting to improve accuracy for match shooting, but Glock's popularity in USPSA/IDPA matches is primarily due to their ability to produce more consistent double taps while maintaining acceptable level of accuracy at 7-20 yards where most targets are placed. You will not find Glocks dominating 25-50 yard slow fire bullseye matches.Can a GLOCK be accurized?
My experience with Lone Wolf barrels (both factory replacement and 40-9 conversion barrels) is that they provide comparable level of accuracy with jacketed/plated bullets.Actually the wolf barrel is what I'm wondering about.
If you push down on the part of the barrel by the ejector port you can see the slop, that barrel will move. None of my accurized 1911's have this slop.
What is considered a light trigger in the G35? Mine states that it is 5.5 and that is the same as my G23There is the Glock 34 I have which is quite accurate, as good as I can shoot it, never put it in a ransom rest though. Then there is the 35 in 40S&W these pistols have long slides, light triggers and target sights.
Can a GLOCK be accurized? I've noticed the barrel on the GLOCK is somewhat sloppy. Can it be made accurate like a 1911 or is that a waste of time?