I think a better way to start this video is by explaining that this part is geared towards a more advanced set of users who aim to improve the performance of their weapon, whether in a self-defense situation or competition. My guess is that 99% of the people complaining about the price are either brand new to the hobby or just plain cheap. I'm not trying to insult anyone, but they are probably not aware that there are plenty of firearms in the $4k range and up. I very much welcome that there are companies out there that bring this type of products to the market. If you think $200 dollars is too expensive, stick to the original $70 striker assembly.
I can only imagine how much nicer the trigger feels with this. For years I hoped for someone to make a steel (or at least aluminum) spacer sleeve, channel liner and spring cups to get rid of that terribly spongy trigger. I'm not really a trigger snob and I don't think Glock triggers are terrible or anything... but I think they could be sooo much better. I really love the 8lb connector, because it makes a more defined wall, shorter, farther back break and shorter reset. With a trigger job it can be brought right back down to 5lbs and be more like a Single Action trigger if that's what people prefer. Having all metal parts could make it even better too.
I own all up the P365 upgrades. 100% satisfaction. The install instructions are very well done. The upgrades were all top notch quality and design. Fantastic products, superior customer service, and veteran owned. I'm very happy to be able to give you my money. Thanks for all you do and your service. You guys rock!
What did you do to make your safety lever sit flush? After my trigger install tonight, it sticks up. Did a quick Google, and this is a well known issue. Did you do anything specific to rectify it to get it to lay flush? Thanks for any advice you have
AWESOME PART: I have installed the short-stroke flat trigger, trigger spring kit, extended magazine release, titanium striker assembly/striker housing with slide cap, and extra power recoil spring assembly - stainless steel guide rod.... love the way it looks and feels. Tested trigger pull which was 3.4-3.6 lbs. PROBLEM: This has been my EDC and I have never ever had a misfeed, stove pipe, light strike, etc of any sort until these replacements went into the gun. Took it to the range, put one in the chamber draw, pull the trigger... Click! Again.. Click! Changed ammo and Click! Some light strikes on the primers and some with no strikes on the primer. Put more $$$ into these gun parts than I paid for the gun. Thank GOD it was at the range and not a REAL situation with my EDC. Sending it to MCarbo to see what's going on. A shame love the concepts, looks, and feel. EDC? Will have to see once I get it back and put 500-1000 rounds through it. May have to go back to original SIG setup. I'll keep yah posted.
The plastic deformaton is the #1 reasonbi havent cleaned my stirker channel more than once. Thank you mcarbo, ill be getting one of these soon. Ordered. Thanks for helping my edc be that much (exponentially) better.
I just installed the Mcarbo titanium striker assembly along with the Mcarbo trigger and spring kit into my P365 XMacro. The difference in the trigger feel and pull is amazing. It feels like a 1911 trigger pull. Well worth every penny, thank you.
I purchased this for my p365xl and was a little worried going to a lighter striker and striker spring may cause problems. I put a pencil down my barrel eraser down and tested the factory striker and the titanium striker assembly. Both shot the pencil out of the barrel, which was a good sign. I took it to the range with the titanium assembly installed and had the stock with me just in case I needed to try the oem spring. Using the assembly as sent with the 3lb spring, I had no issues. It fired everything I put into it. I showed a little striker drag on some of the rounds with softer primers, but everything functioned perfectly. I fired Remington training 115 grain fmj, Sellier and Bellot 115 grain fmj, federal hst 124 grain jhp, ammo inc 124 grain sierra jhp, and hornady custom 124 grain xtp. The sellier and bellot and hornady seem to have harder primers, but everything worked flawlessly. For my firearm, this titanium striker assembly worked perfectly.
Thank you for posting this! Seems like someone else had a bad experience and eventually switched the striker spring with the OEM which fixed the reliability issue.
Just ordered one. Please make a slide cap with fine horizontal serrations similar to what you see on some rear sights. I personally believe it would look better than the current golf ball look while providing traction for disassembly and have anti-glare qualities.
Just installed on one of my 365XL’s. Night and day difference over the plastic sleeve. Now with the sleeve I have a complete MCARBO Striker assembly, paired with your flat trigger this setup is 🔥🔥🔥🔥. I’ve had no issues, functions flawlessly.
Can the MCARBO stainless steel striker housing replacement be used with a normal OEM Sig striker? I speak for myself, and likely for some others, that I feel uneasy replacing the striker on my CCW pistol with a something that has not had any evidence or extensive testing published. Titanium being lighter and softer than steel seems like a choice that could sacrifice reliability with various ammo types. I could be totally wrong, but I think it would behoove MCARBO to publish some kind of long term testing especially considering most people buy a SIG P365 as an EDC CCW, rather than to use as a race gun. Chris Bartocci of Small Arms Solutions posited in a video awhile back that the broken striker issues of 2019 were due to SIG releasing a bad batch of heat treatment for the strikers; it was NOT due to striker drag, which still occurs with most pistols this size that use a Browning-style tilting breech action. The steel striker housing replacement seems like a worthwhile upgrade as I wasn't even aware of the revisions or SIG's design flaw inherent in their expedient remedy. However, MCARBO needs to put out some more convincing data to convince those of us that intend to carry for protection why their titanium striker is such a no-brainer, just as if not more reliable, as well as more durable long term than the OEM striker, especially considering the striker alone is over $100. Nevermind how much "better trigger pull" might be or some such. I haven't seen anybody conduct any independent reviews to my knowledge either.
EXACTLY. But on top of this, after watching this video and seeing just how insanely flawed this pistol is, I'm getting rid of mine. There's no way in hell would I trust this gun during SHTF knowing how poorly designed that factory striker assembly is. And as you pointed out, just throwing a softer and un-tested titanium replacement in there is just as much of a crapshoot. Most of us bought this gun based on Sig's OLDER reputation. We did not know that the newer ownership are globalists who are in bed with the Marxist Pentagon. The Pentagon rejected Glocks because Gaston Glock was not down with the New World Order and was in fact very pro-gun and pro-freedom. Sig absolutely got the contract because they swore allegiance to the bad guys. My Sig P365 Gen 2 developed light strikes after 400 rounds. Sig charged me almost $60 shipping to fix it under warranty. They admitted that the striker cup was faulty and was causing the light strikes and replaced it, but still forced me to pay almost $60 for the shipping to get it back. Every customer service agent I've dealt with at Sig has been rude, arrogant and unfriendly. I will NEVER buy a modern Sig ever again after this experience and will stick with Austrian made Glocks, Berettas, or older American semi-autos (Ruger and Smith made some great semi-autos back in the day). Hell, even my Kel Tec P11 is more reliable than my Sig P365. It always go bang and never has an issue. But yeah, modern Sig SUCKS and anyone carrying one is walking around with a false sense of security. Because you never know when that flawed design is going to bite you when you need your gun the most.
I purchased this striker for my edc. The gun had never misfired until I installs this striker. It would misfire about two rounds per magazine. I decided to leave the titanium striker but reinstalled with my original springs. It working flawless again.
If I had one complaint about the lightened trigger pull is that the gun becomes much pickier with ammo. It's the price you have to pay for such a light pull weight (physics), so it's not really any fault of the design or malfunction. It's just the sacrifice you have to make to have that pull weight. I've found using only high quality ammo to fix this problem. That was their recommendation to me and considering this is my EDC I can easily warrant the premium. I've had varying levels of luck with reloads/remanufactured with the best success only being 1 out of 2 working and worst only consecutive failures. I might also add that it's pretty well common knowledge or should be that different guns like different types of ammo better than others. Finding what to feed your little buddy should be a buffet. See what it digests the best and poops out the most consistently. So to reiterate this is very functional and well worth the $200 price tag. It does work reliably with the caveat that you lose the variety of ammo choice normally available for the stock trigger.
I have about 2,000 rounds through my 365 XL with no malfunctions, until I installed this titanium striker. Out of the last 50 rounds, I have had seven light primer strikes with two different types of quality ammo. I have a small dowel that I use after cleaning the gun to test the striker. Hold the gun vertical, place the dowel in the barrel and pull the trigger. Normally the dowel pretty much jumps all the way out of the gun, with this new titanium striker it is notably weaker. After the first round of light strikes I cleaned the striker channel thoroughly, took it back to the range and had more. I put the stock striker back in. It had never been picky at all about ammo, ran everything.
What did you do to make your safety lever sit flush? After my trigger install tonight, it sticks up. Did a quick Google, and this is a well known issue. Did you do anything specific to rectify it to get it to lay flush? Thanks for any advice you have
Will the titanium mixed with the steel parts cause galling? Im curious if this will cause undo wear/safety issues. I bought one and you can hear/feel the grinding of metal when you approach the wall. The break is crisp but that grinding/grittiness brings concern. I was told by mcarbo this was always occurring, however since there is a lighter in the mcarbo i now noticed it. I told him i had the OEM spring paired with the mcarbo striker. He then recommended i polish and or oil the locking lug, check the chrome housing and check the striker slide. I am personally not comfortable polishing these item myself. Maybe i will use there polishing services. Right now i am unsure what to do because i haven’t experienced this issue with the stock parts. Maybe i will go back to OEM. Their customer service was great as he was trying to help me figure out the issue. We were talking for sometime as he walked me through tryin to figure out the issues.
I got my fuse last month Unless than two mags through it before the back plate broke I really didn’t have plans for tearing into it this far but there I am I noticed immediately the plastic sleeve wasn’t going to take much before being useless Now that I’ve gotten used to tearing it down and understand how everything works and goes together I’m going to be adding a manual thumb safety along with the. Titanium spring assembly Also upgrading the trigger
Great video and info. I will end up buying this but are many of you really removing your striker assembly after every shooting? I clean the Sig after every shooting but not the striker assembly
Have two of these one for my macro and one for my custom Fdez slide. Macro fits awesome, but with the Fdez unfortunately the metal sleeve with the pin to retain the rear slide plate doesn't work with the Fdez since they don't design the little hole in the slide like Sig does. I still am rocking the new striker and spring though which are top notch designing 🤙
The main Concern with the 365 sig is exactly what you mentioned and that is Firing Pin Drag. Every Spent Casings that is fired through the 365 has a Drag Mark on the Casings. It hasn’t been a Factor with the Firing Pin.
When the striker return spring is left out it causes a CHANGE in the operation of the manual safety lever, which allows the manual safety lever to be engaged in an UNINTENDED condition, also depending upon whether the muzzle is pointed upward or downward. WITH the striker return spring INSTALLED you can only engage the manual safety lever when the striker is COCKED and ready to fire. If the striker is NOT cocked it will NOT allow you to engage the manual safety lever. When the striker return spring is NOT installed, if the striker is NOT cocked, AND you have the muzzle pointed DOWNWARD, it will ALLOW the manual safety lever to be ENGAGED in an unintended condition and lock the slide in position. If the striker is NOT cocked and you instead point the muzzle UPWARD it will NOT allow you to engage the manual safety lever. The lack of the striker return spring also causes other annoyances. Whenever I have the slide removed I always press the striker safety block inward to make sure that it is moving freely. Without the striker return spring installed the striker safety block gets held in place by the striker and I have to physically push the striker rearward. Whereas, with the striker return spring installed IT moves the striker rearward automatically releasing the striker safety block. I purchased a P365XL in December of 2022. As soon as I discovered the issues that the lack of a striker return spring was causing I stole a striker return spring from a spare striker assembly and installed it into my P365XL and eliminated the problem. I have not had any malfunctions, or light primer strikes, or noticed any problem that the striker return spring causes. Regardless of how you are supposed to operate a firearm, having a pistol operating in odd non-uniform ways that it shouldn't is eventually going to causes someone a serious problem that wouldn't be possible if the striker return spring is installed. Not having the striker return spring installed is like a having a gear shift lever that changes it's shift pattern depending upon whether you are going uphill or downhill. What possible problem would having the striker return spring installed cause??? Why would you NOT want the striker return spring installed???
Original spring back in. All other Mcarbo parts stayed. No more misfires. Should have acknowledged a bad batch of .10 springs. We still use them. Respect meter just lowered a bit.
Great video, but this drop in kit does not work with ALL P365 pistols. The complete drop in kit only works with slides that have the channel hole by the striker otherwise the cap lock and spring cannot be installed. I found this out the hard way and am stuck with using the plastic sleeve and OEM cap. Will Mcarbo come up with a new sleeve design for the slides without a channel? Time will tell.
The plastic brackets in the OEM hit a circle of metal, but in the titanium striker it hits a cross (less metal surface than a circle). This means those plastic brackets will wear out much faster (2 x in my opinion) with the titanium striker profile rather than with the OEM. I suggest adding a tiny washer to protect the plastic parts. Otherwise the design is great! (I am just a stickler for details 🙂)
A beautiful system and it's an MCARBO product so you know it's going to be better than stock and probably the best availble product regardless of price. Anyone having trouble with a dead trigger with their stock P365? It just started with mine after over 500 rounds.
Yes, had one dead trigger pull at about 1100 rounds on a spectre comp. It was freaky. Pulled the trigger and nothing happened. Tapped, racked, and it worked again. So I would think upgrading to this striker assembly would help in that area??
I don't believe that I could ever put a titanium striker in a pistol again. Titanium is much lighter and is just a strong, but it is nowhere near as tough. I put a titanium striker in my (you're not going to believe this) open-class Glock 23 that I built back in the early '90's. Granted, I'm on the second barrel/comp combo and that pistol has at least 50K rounds through it, but the tip of the striker that contacts the primer wore down and finally would no longer fire the rounds. I switched to a skeletonized steel striker, which gave me a good bit of the reduced lock time, but is indestructible. Good luck, hopefully today's titanium alloys are tougher than the were 30-years ago. Add: I literally just read that there are titanium allows now with both great strength AND toughness! Hopefully, you're using one of them. I did love the reduced lock time. Like a single action trigger, it would fire before my poor trigger control could pull the pistol off target! Might have to try one of these in my P320 X5 Max...except it doesn't look like you have one. Oh well...
Yep, my P365 drags primers. You can see a weird mark on the primer where the striker is still in contact while the case is moving to eject. I'm getting this. Correction: i just bought this.
I was literally about to throw my sig away when i found out the plasic liner was going to be chewed up just by taking it apart AND THEN come to find out they only sell the WHOLE striker assembly? Thank you for literally saving my sig
Will this fix the light strikes that I am seeing after isntalling MCARBO flat trigger and spring kit? Love the products, but hate the click and no bang!
You have to be crazy keeping this gun after seeing just how incredibly flawed this design is in this video. MCARBO makes great stuff, but the design of this gun means it will always have issues no matter what you do to it. Sig sold us all lemons and knew it before they sold them. Yes, when these guns shoot, they shoot great. But that means nothing if they're not dead reliable. My Gen 2 developed light strikes after 400 rounds. Sent it to Sig under warranty. They said the factory striker cup was bad and replaced it. They then charged me almost $60 for shipping despite the gun being under warranty and having a factory striker cup issue. The Sig customer service people were all arrogant and rude during the whole process as well. Just a horrible experience. People need to stop supporting such a bad company with a deeply flawed product.
@@JohnB-dr8sk Yeah I get it. Not sure it's Mcarbo's fault or whether it's a SIG design issue. I put the regular OEM striker spring back in, having taken out the MCarbo striker spring. I left in the MCarbo safety block spring (tiny one in slide). Lets see if that addresses the light strikes. MCarbo telling us we need to use different ammo is not a good or confident suggestion. My striker fired Glock 19 eats everything. Next I will try a new SIG striker, because I have read that might solve the problem, a $59 test. If that doesn't work, I could think about this titanium striker if I KNEW it would fix the thing. I love the XL and XMacro accuracy and recoil, and feel in my hand, but this light strike business KILLS this platform for EDC application.
@@Tony-ix8wd My friend, if you haven't figured out that it's a Sig design flaw by now then I don't know what to tell you. Continuing to support Sig by buying parts from them just to make your gun run normal is just insanity to me (sorry). Would you buy a brand new car under warranty, and then pay out of your pocket to replace the transmission with a custom one just to make sure it drives reliably? Of course not. And neither should you do the same with a brand new handgun from a company as well known as Sig. As you pointed out, your Glock is dead reliable. I would rather go back to a Glock 43 with 7rds (or a Glock 43 with a Magguts kit to make it carry 8rds with a flush magazine) that is dead reliable than carry a gun with 3-4 more rounds that might not go bang when I need it most.
@@JohnB-dr8sk I have not figured out the cause with certainty, and if spending $59 on this 'new' striker design makes it so that the next 100 rounds go bang correctly, then I am good with this as EDC. My XMac mag holds 17 rounds, btw, and my XL mag 15 rounds.
Are upgrade slides typically having the notch where the spring sets. even though not necessary for current factory set up? Think of upgrading slide as next investment and would like to keep using this assembly upgrade too.
Taurus is making SS retaining cups for some of their striker fired firearms. I would love to see someone solve the plastic retaining cup issue. If weight is the issue with SS cups for Sig , maybe titanium cups?
Of course this gets released within 2 weeks of my buying the titanium performance striker, Short Stroke Flat trigger, and Spring kit 😑But at least my X Macro Comp runs great with the upgrades 🙂
If you already have our Titanium Striker, we do offer just the housing and back plate so you don't have to replace the whole thing: www.mcarbo.com/Sig-Sauer-P365-Steel-Striker-Housing.aspx
So to anybody that has installed their trigger, what was your solution for the safety lever that doesn't sit flush anymore? Alter the trigger bar? File the slide cap? Even though this is a well-known and widespread issue, macarbo hasn't cared enough to attempt to fix it, nor do they care enough to reply to people when you try to get a hold of them.
I’m getting 5 of these that way I have multiple replacements because after 500 rds of ammo I’m just replacing parts at that point. What good is a credit card if I can’t use the damn thing? I pay my bill every month in full means good credit.
Excellent video. I’m going to have to order one. Side note, I have noticed that with my Macro Tac ops that without the striker return spring, the striker will rattle back and forth in the slide. If you hold the trigger to the rear, the striker will actually play peek a boo when you move the gun back and forth.
Hello my slide is a sharps bros and it does not have the channel for the your pin, can i still use this and is there a kit that doesn’t have the sleeve and the pin??
Wow this guy could sell ketchup popsicles to Eskimos 😂 Lol! I'd go ahead and stick with the engineering over @ Sig any day.. Sig oem parts all the way baby!😮👍 Thanks sig you guys rock! 🔫
I heard the mcarbo trigger upgrade contains a weaker striker spring that can strike weaker... is that true? I know that can lessen trigger pull.... but why? Also why not just polish the striker?
Still having trouble with the physics here. A lighter striker and lighter spring has less potential and kinetic energy to deliver to the primer. Whereas the factory unit being heaver may or may not have a longer travel time after sear release, but it delivers more energy to the primer for assured detonation. I did buy your striker, found it not reliable and sold it off for $50.
I just ordered one I’m extremely excited I tried to clean my old one because my performance was poor and the plastic got ripped up when I was cleaning it .
I installed it and it's great... is it safe. Idk? Would love to see it tortured and proven that its as safe or safer than the OEM since the shape is slightly different. 😅
But what if we have one with a striker return spring in it. I have your striker and just got the cup and backplate in. Should I keep that small striker return spring inside the cup and transfer it over?
Aftermarket slides. We have confirmed Zev and Zaffiri Precision utilize the slide cutout for the slide cap pin. We also have one in the works!@@Fried_PenguinWings
I would like to upgrade my P365XL trigger, but MCarbo wants to treat me like a car salesman. "If you want that, you'll have to pay extra." It's just not worth dropping $500+ on a $600 firearm to address the trigger. Better to learn to deal with your current setup and focus on other things. Maybe they'll create 1 item or pack to address everything for a far price... one day.
I don't blame MCARBO. I blame all the idiots who own P365s (and P320s) who continue to let SIg get away with massive fraud on their customers by selling them an obviously flawed pistol. People would NEVER allow this level of malfeasance after buying a new car. But because the 2A community are such corporate arse kissers (even after corporations have proven to all be working for the globalists) they literally bend over and scream "Sir may I have another one!" This gun is seriously flawed (as was my Gen 2 which developed light strikes after just 400 rounds) and people have to be crazy for relying on it for self defense.
You guys did it! I cant find those striker sleeves by themselves... Big issue. I'll have Danno at BILL JACKSONS pick this entire kit up for me. Rocking upgrade! Makes takedown and re-assembly similar to the rear plate on a glock, with the extractor plunger locking the rear plate on. Nice thinking.
@@Tony-ix8wdI shouldn't have to replace the thing every time I take it down. Regardless if they have it or not now, I don't need it anymore... This upgrade shoots really well and works excellent for takedown and maint.
Looks like this video was released about a year ago. Is there any real DATA showing any benefits for these Mcarbo upgrades? P.S. I've seen the data on the trigger upgrade which is good, but what about the striker ones? Thanks.
you said that the housing and cap are sold separately for those of us that bought the striker in the past but i dont see it on your website was hoping to pick it up during your black friday sale
I have a complete setup for my P365. It's actually fully overhauled with Icarus slide and XL+Macro grip, PMM comp, DPM kit, and all of the Mcarbo parts apart from the striker sleeve (out of stock at the moment) The trigger is fantastic and not only lightened the pull to about 4lbs or so, it really helped smooth everything out. Another plus is that you have a screw that prevents overtravel. My setup was about $3,300 with the RMRcc, but I'm confident that I can outshoot almost anyone with more experience than I if they're using a stock pistol with an optic. I can consistently ring 10inch steel at 50+ yards with good cadence. It's scary how fast and accurate it is for the size/capacity.
@@gabecastillo1634 Glock NEVER had issues like this. Yeah, occasionally Glocks have issues, but it's not because of their design. It's usually an issue that pops up right away when the gun is new, not after 400 or a 1000 rounds like Sig's P365 pr P320. Every gun maker has issues occasionally like Glock has had. But I have never seen a gun from a large, reputable manufacturer like Sig develop light strikes AFTER the gun is broken in. This video proves beyond all doubt that the P365 has a serious and unfixable design flaw with their striker system. People have to be crazy for relying on this gun for serious self defense.
@@JohnB-dr8sk they had a recall for the Gen 4, Glocks also have a major extractor issue, bottom line is all manufacturers fuck up then fix it, Glock grip angle is also a design flaw in itself lmao
@@JohnB-dr8sk it’s not hard to pull your weapon out of your holster without it going off but apparently that was an issue for officers who didn’t have the guts to say they did it but to each their own I guess, and might I add I think it was only 6 who reported on that specific issue
Simple solution to these expensive striker fired upgrades: Just go with an internal hammer fired pistol like the FN Reflex or S&W Equalizer. Here that SIg? Get rid of the crappy sponge trigger and replace it with an internal hammer system.
Then, why make a Titanium Striker and put it in a Steel Channel in the first place? The channel is steel. The striker spring and striker housing is steel. All of it is wrapped around a Titanium Striker. So, the cups being Titanium also would not make a difference as far as galvanic corrosion. Titanium and Steel have been used together in many applications for a very long time. Galvanic corrosion would be caused by a softer metal with metallurgical properties farther away from each other, such as copper and certain high carbon steels.
I think a better way to start this video is by explaining that this part is geared towards a more advanced set of users who aim to improve the performance of their weapon, whether in a self-defense situation or competition. My guess is that 99% of the people complaining about the price are either brand new to the hobby or just plain cheap. I'm not trying to insult anyone, but they are probably not aware that there are plenty of firearms in the $4k range and up. I very much welcome that there are companies out there that bring this type of products to the market. If you think $200 dollars is too expensive, stick to the original $70 striker assembly.
Smooth brains don’t factor in engineering and labor that goes into these prices
I can only imagine how much nicer the trigger feels with this. For years I hoped for someone to make a steel (or at least aluminum) spacer sleeve, channel liner and spring cups to get rid of that terribly spongy trigger. I'm not really a trigger snob and I don't think Glock triggers are terrible or anything... but I think they could be sooo much better. I really love the 8lb connector, because it makes a more defined wall, shorter, farther back break and shorter reset. With a trigger job it can be brought right back down to 5lbs and be more like a Single Action trigger if that's what people prefer. Having all metal parts could make it even better too.
I own all up the P365 upgrades. 100% satisfaction. The install instructions are very well done. The upgrades were all top notch quality and design.
Fantastic products, superior customer service, and veteran owned. I'm very happy to be able to give you my money. Thanks for all you do and your service. You guys rock!
What did you do to make your safety lever sit flush? After my trigger install tonight, it sticks up. Did a quick Google, and this is a well known issue. Did you do anything specific to rectify it to get it to lay flush? Thanks for any advice you have
I just ordered my 2nd titanium firing pin assembly. MCarbo just brought the P365 pistol family up a few notches. Thank you for a great upgrade!
AWESOME PART: I have installed the short-stroke flat trigger, trigger spring kit, extended magazine release, titanium striker assembly/striker housing with slide cap, and extra power recoil spring assembly - stainless steel guide rod.... love the way it looks and feels. Tested trigger pull which was 3.4-3.6 lbs. PROBLEM: This has been my EDC and I have never ever had a misfeed, stove pipe, light strike, etc of any sort until these replacements went into the gun. Took it to the range, put one in the chamber draw, pull the trigger... Click! Again.. Click! Changed ammo and Click! Some light strikes on the primers and some with no strikes on the primer. Put more $$$ into these gun parts than I paid for the gun. Thank GOD it was at the range and not a REAL situation with my EDC. Sending it to MCarbo to see what's going on. A shame love the concepts, looks, and feel. EDC? Will have to see once I get it back and put 500-1000 rounds through it. May have to go back to original SIG setup. I'll keep yah posted.
changes internals then complains
@@reefermonster9651 no complaints. Just facts!
@@reefermonster9651 It didn't go bang. If you're going to complain about something, this is an excellent choice. LOL
Maybe post a video? I'm interested in the followup.
Still no response from M*Carbo regarding issues. Really respected this company. Very disappointed!!!
The plastic deformaton is the #1 reasonbi havent cleaned my stirker channel more than once. Thank you mcarbo, ill be getting one of these soon.
Ordered. Thanks for helping my edc be that much (exponentially) better.
I just installed the Mcarbo titanium striker assembly along with the Mcarbo trigger and spring kit into my P365 XMacro. The difference in the trigger feel and pull is amazing. It feels like a 1911 trigger pull. Well worth every penny, thank you.
did you use the striker spring from the trigger spring kit or leave the spring that came on the titanium striker assembly?
I purchased this for my p365xl and was a little worried going to a lighter striker and striker spring may cause problems. I put a pencil down my barrel eraser down and tested the factory striker and the titanium striker assembly. Both shot the pencil out of the barrel, which was a good sign. I took it to the range with the titanium assembly installed and had the stock with me just in case I needed to try the oem spring. Using the assembly as sent with the 3lb spring, I had no issues. It fired everything I put into it. I showed a little striker drag on some of the rounds with softer primers, but everything functioned perfectly. I fired Remington training 115 grain fmj, Sellier and Bellot 115 grain fmj, federal hst 124 grain jhp, ammo inc 124 grain sierra jhp, and hornady custom 124 grain xtp. The sellier and bellot and hornady seem to have harder primers, but everything worked flawlessly. For my firearm, this titanium striker assembly worked perfectly.
Thank you for posting this! Seems like someone else had a bad experience and eventually switched the striker spring with the OEM which fixed the reliability issue.
Just ordered one. Please make a slide cap with fine horizontal serrations similar to what you see on some rear sights. I personally believe it would look better than the current golf ball look while providing traction for disassembly and have anti-glare qualities.
would be a nice option and easy to do! Kind of how FCD offers dimples or serrations!
I bought a Tyrant Slide Cover. But it look like you have to use the MCARBO slide cover.
I am strongly considering this upgrade. Thank you!
Watching the assembly and disassembly makes think glocks are very well put together
I'll add these to all of my 365 but I would like to see you offer the option for a more OEM looking slide cap
Just installed on one of my 365XL’s. Night and day difference over the plastic sleeve. Now with the sleeve I have a complete MCARBO Striker assembly, paired with your flat trigger this setup is 🔥🔥🔥🔥. I’ve had no issues, functions flawlessly.
@@user-mp3lf7ny1p will do 👊🏻
Did you use the spring from the striker kit or from the trigger kit?
The spokesman in this video deserves a raise.
The engineer for sure
Beautiful hand model.
that trigger is AMAZING. My striker assembly arrives today. Keep up the great work
Can the MCARBO stainless steel striker housing replacement be used with a normal OEM Sig striker? I speak for myself, and likely for some others, that I feel uneasy replacing the striker on my CCW pistol with a something that has not had any evidence or extensive testing published. Titanium being lighter and softer than steel seems like a choice that could sacrifice reliability with various ammo types. I could be totally wrong, but I think it would behoove MCARBO to publish some kind of long term testing especially considering most people buy a SIG P365 as an EDC CCW, rather than to use as a race gun. Chris Bartocci of Small Arms Solutions posited in a video awhile back that the broken striker issues of 2019 were due to SIG releasing a bad batch of heat treatment for the strikers; it was NOT due to striker drag, which still occurs with most pistols this size that use a Browning-style tilting breech action.
The steel striker housing replacement seems like a worthwhile upgrade as I wasn't even aware of the revisions or SIG's design flaw inherent in their expedient remedy. However, MCARBO needs to put out some more convincing data to convince those of us that intend to carry for protection why their titanium striker is such a no-brainer, just as if not more reliable, as well as more durable long term than the OEM striker, especially considering the striker alone is over $100. Nevermind how much "better trigger pull" might be or some such. I haven't seen anybody conduct any independent reviews to my knowledge either.
EXACTLY. But on top of this, after watching this video and seeing just how insanely flawed this pistol is, I'm getting rid of mine. There's no way in hell would I trust this gun during SHTF knowing how poorly designed that factory striker assembly is. And as you pointed out, just throwing a softer and un-tested titanium replacement in there is just as much of a crapshoot. Most of us bought this gun based on Sig's OLDER reputation. We did not know that the newer ownership are globalists who are in bed with the Marxist Pentagon. The Pentagon rejected Glocks because Gaston Glock was not down with the New World Order and was in fact very pro-gun and pro-freedom. Sig absolutely got the contract because they swore allegiance to the bad guys. My Sig P365 Gen 2 developed light strikes after 400 rounds. Sig charged me almost $60 shipping to fix it under warranty. They admitted that the striker cup was faulty and was causing the light strikes and replaced it, but still forced me to pay almost $60 for the shipping to get it back. Every customer service agent I've dealt with at Sig has been rude, arrogant and unfriendly. I will NEVER buy a modern Sig ever again after this experience and will stick with Austrian made Glocks, Berettas, or older American semi-autos (Ruger and Smith made some great semi-autos back in the day). Hell, even my Kel Tec P11 is more reliable than my Sig P365. It always go bang and never has an issue. But yeah, modern Sig SUCKS and anyone carrying one is walking around with a false sense of security. Because you never know when that flawed design is going to bite you when you need your gun the most.
It's very easy. Watching video and reading you can do it. I have a few tricks to not marr up the gun.
I purchased this striker for my edc. The gun had never misfired until I installs this striker. It would misfire about two rounds per magazine. I decided to leave the titanium striker but reinstalled with my original springs. It working flawless again.
I would be pissed, $200.00 and doesn't work....
Of course it's misfiring, it's too light. Why on earth would you want to lighten the striker assembly?
If I had one complaint about the lightened trigger pull is that the gun becomes much pickier with ammo. It's the price you have to pay for such a light pull weight (physics), so it's not really any fault of the design or malfunction. It's just the sacrifice you have to make to have that pull weight. I've found using only high quality ammo to fix this problem. That was their recommendation to me and considering this is my EDC I can easily warrant the premium. I've had varying levels of luck with reloads/remanufactured with the best success only being 1 out of 2 working and worst only consecutive failures.
I might also add that it's pretty well common knowledge or should be that different guns like different types of ammo better than others. Finding what to feed your little buddy should be a buffet. See what it digests the best and poops out the most consistently.
So to reiterate this is very functional and well worth the $200 price tag. It does work reliably with the caveat that you lose the variety of ammo choice normally available for the stock trigger.
Hmmmm
I have about 2,000 rounds through my 365 XL with no malfunctions, until I installed this titanium striker. Out of the last 50 rounds, I have had seven light primer strikes with two different types of quality ammo. I have a small dowel that I use after cleaning the gun to test the striker. Hold the gun vertical, place the dowel in the barrel and pull the trigger. Normally the dowel pretty much jumps all the way out of the gun, with this new titanium striker it is notably weaker. After the first round of light strikes I cleaned the striker channel thoroughly, took it back to the range and had more. I put the stock striker back in. It had never been picky at all about ammo, ran everything.
Bought a new TacOps, wasn’t even looking for this… but after watching this video I’m sold
Man I wish that rear cover was serrated or knurled, not the golf ball look….killer upgrade anyhow!
Does match extended mag. Release. Lol
Fantastic ....just ordered the striker assembly upgrade !
I already have the Mcarbo trigger installed an ...WOW ...total game changer !
What did you do to make your safety lever sit flush? After my trigger install tonight, it sticks up. Did a quick Google, and this is a well known issue. Did you do anything specific to rectify it to get it to lay flush? Thanks for any advice you have
Will the titanium mixed with the steel parts cause galling? Im curious if this will cause undo wear/safety issues. I bought one and you can hear/feel the grinding of metal when you approach the wall. The break is crisp but that grinding/grittiness brings concern. I was told by mcarbo this was always occurring, however since there is a lighter in the mcarbo i now noticed it. I told him i had the OEM spring paired with the mcarbo striker. He then recommended i polish and or oil the locking lug, check the chrome housing and check the striker slide. I am personally not comfortable polishing these item myself. Maybe i will use there polishing services. Right now i am unsure what to do because i haven’t experienced this issue with the stock parts. Maybe i will go back to OEM. Their customer service was great as he was trying to help me figure out the issue. We were talking for sometime as he walked me through tryin to figure out the issues.
THIS
Just bought my SS replacement part. Had the Titanium striker and love it.
The Titanium striker transformed my trigger pull. It eliminated the grit in the pull. Crisp release.
Clearer and more concise instructional videos then with Chris!
I got my fuse last month
Unless than two mags through it before the back plate broke
I really didn’t have plans for tearing into it this far but there I am
I noticed immediately the plastic sleeve wasn’t going to take much before being useless
Now that I’ve gotten used to tearing it down and understand how everything works and goes together I’m going to be adding a manual thumb safety along with the. Titanium spring assembly
Also upgrading the trigger
Great video and info. I will end up buying this but are many of you really removing your striker assembly after every shooting?
I clean the Sig after every shooting but not the striker assembly
Great video - excellent pace and verbal instruction! Thank you!
Have two of these one for my macro and one for my custom Fdez slide. Macro fits awesome, but with the Fdez unfortunately the metal sleeve with the pin to retain the rear slide plate doesn't work with the Fdez since they don't design the little hole in the slide like Sig does. I still am rocking the new striker and spring though which are top notch designing 🤙
The main Concern with the 365 sig is exactly what you mentioned and that is Firing Pin Drag. Every Spent Casings that is fired through the 365 has a Drag Mark on the Casings. It hasn’t been a Factor with the Firing Pin.
When the striker return spring is left out it causes a CHANGE in the operation of the manual safety lever, which allows the manual safety lever to be engaged in an UNINTENDED condition, also depending upon whether the muzzle is pointed upward or downward.
WITH the striker return spring INSTALLED you can only engage the manual safety lever when the striker is COCKED and ready to fire. If the striker is NOT cocked it will NOT allow you to engage the manual safety lever.
When the striker return spring is NOT installed, if the striker is NOT cocked, AND you have the muzzle pointed DOWNWARD, it will ALLOW the manual safety lever to be ENGAGED in an unintended condition and lock the slide in position. If the striker is NOT cocked and you instead point the muzzle UPWARD it will NOT allow you to engage the manual safety lever.
The lack of the striker return spring also causes other annoyances. Whenever I have the slide removed I always press the striker safety block inward to make sure that it is moving freely. Without the striker return spring installed the striker safety block gets held in place by the striker and I have to physically push the striker rearward. Whereas, with the striker return spring installed IT moves the striker rearward automatically releasing the striker safety block.
I purchased a P365XL in December of 2022. As soon as I discovered the issues that the lack of a striker return spring was causing I stole a striker return spring from a spare striker assembly and installed it into my P365XL and eliminated the problem. I have not had any malfunctions, or light primer strikes, or noticed any problem that the striker return spring causes.
Regardless of how you are supposed to operate a firearm, having a pistol operating in odd non-uniform ways that it shouldn't is eventually going to causes someone a serious problem that wouldn't be possible if the striker return spring is installed.
Not having the striker return spring installed is like a having a gear shift lever that changes it's shift pattern depending upon whether you are going uphill or downhill.
What possible problem would having the striker return spring installed cause???
Why would you NOT want the striker return spring installed???
Original spring back in. All other Mcarbo parts stayed. No more misfires. Should have acknowledged a bad batch of .10 springs. We still use them. Respect meter just lowered a bit.
When will these be back in stock????
Great video, but this drop in kit does not work with ALL P365 pistols. The complete drop in kit only works with slides that have the channel hole by the striker otherwise the cap lock and spring cannot be installed. I found this out the hard way and am stuck with using the plastic sleeve and OEM cap. Will Mcarbo come up with a new sleeve design for the slides without a channel? Time will tell.
Great video! The $184 price tag is worth the "quality" and "piece of mind" to know that the pistol won't fail from cleaning it.
THIS INCLUDES THE STRIKER SLEEVE, OR THE SLEEVE IS SEPARATED? BOW MUCH IS THE SLEEVE?
I Like His NEW Look And The New TATS!!!!
The plastic brackets in the OEM hit a circle of metal, but in the titanium striker it hits a cross (less metal surface than a circle). This means those plastic brackets will wear out much faster (2 x in my opinion) with the titanium striker profile rather than with the OEM. I suggest adding a tiny washer to protect the plastic parts. Otherwise the design is great! (I am just a stickler for details 🙂)
Any way to get the slide cap in a raw finish?
A beautiful system and it's an MCARBO product so you know it's going to be better than stock and probably the best availble product regardless of price.
Anyone having trouble with a dead trigger with their stock P365? It just started with mine after over 500 rounds.
Yes, had one dead trigger pull at about 1100 rounds on a spectre comp. It was freaky. Pulled the trigger and nothing happened. Tapped, racked, and it worked again. So I would think upgrading to this striker assembly would help in that area??
I don't believe that I could ever put a titanium striker in a pistol again. Titanium is much lighter and is just a strong, but it is nowhere near as tough. I put a titanium striker in my (you're not going to believe this) open-class Glock 23 that I built back in the early '90's. Granted, I'm on the second barrel/comp combo and that pistol has at least 50K rounds through it, but the tip of the striker that contacts the primer wore down and finally would no longer fire the rounds. I switched to a skeletonized steel striker, which gave me a good bit of the reduced lock time, but is indestructible. Good luck, hopefully today's titanium alloys are tougher than the were 30-years ago.
Add: I literally just read that there are titanium allows now with both great strength AND toughness! Hopefully, you're using one of them. I did love the reduced lock time. Like a single action trigger, it would fire before my poor trigger control could pull the pistol off target! Might have to try one of these in my P320 X5 Max...except it doesn't look like you have one. Oh well...
Where can the striker sleeve housing be purchased separately? Your website doesn’t seem to have that separately.
AWESOME! I need one for my P320 now too!
you should release a custom sear, to match this striker for perfect engagement of the surfaces
Nice, I'll be purchasing one of these soon.
Dammit! I just ordered a trigger yesterday and didn’t even know this was an option, I def would’ve added it to my order
Yep, my P365 drags primers. You can see a weird mark on the primer where the striker is still in contact while the case is moving to eject.
I'm getting this.
Correction: i just bought this.
It feels amazing, crispy break and what travel?? Thank you
When are you guys going to get a cnc extractor?
I was literally about to throw my sig away when i found out the plasic liner was going to be chewed up just by taking it apart AND THEN come to find out they only sell the WHOLE striker assembly? Thank you for literally saving my sig
A bit dramatic, don't ya think?
Will this fix the light strikes that I am seeing after isntalling MCARBO flat trigger and spring kit? Love the products, but hate the click and no bang!
You have to be crazy keeping this gun after seeing just how incredibly flawed this design is in this video. MCARBO makes great stuff, but the design of this gun means it will always have issues no matter what you do to it. Sig sold us all lemons and knew it before they sold them. Yes, when these guns shoot, they shoot great. But that means nothing if they're not dead reliable. My Gen 2 developed light strikes after 400 rounds. Sent it to Sig under warranty. They said the factory striker cup was bad and replaced it. They then charged me almost $60 for shipping despite the gun being under warranty and having a factory striker cup issue. The Sig customer service people were all arrogant and rude during the whole process as well. Just a horrible experience. People need to stop supporting such a bad company with a deeply flawed product.
@@JohnB-dr8sk Yeah I get it. Not sure it's Mcarbo's fault or whether it's a SIG design issue. I put the regular OEM striker spring back in, having taken out the MCarbo striker spring. I left in the MCarbo safety block spring (tiny one in slide). Lets see if that addresses the light strikes. MCarbo telling us we need to use different ammo is not a good or confident suggestion. My striker fired Glock 19 eats everything. Next I will try a new SIG striker, because I have read that might solve the problem, a $59 test. If that doesn't work, I could think about this titanium striker if I KNEW it would fix the thing. I love the XL and XMacro accuracy and recoil, and feel in my hand, but this light strike business KILLS this platform for EDC application.
@@Tony-ix8wd My friend, if you haven't figured out that it's a Sig design flaw by now then I don't know what to tell you. Continuing to support Sig by buying parts from them just to make your gun run normal is just insanity to me (sorry). Would you buy a brand new car under warranty, and then pay out of your pocket to replace the transmission with a custom one just to make sure it drives reliably? Of course not. And neither should you do the same with a brand new handgun from a company as well known as Sig. As you pointed out, your Glock is dead reliable. I would rather go back to a Glock 43 with 7rds (or a Glock 43 with a Magguts kit to make it carry 8rds with a flush magazine) that is dead reliable than carry a gun with 3-4 more rounds that might not go bang when I need it most.
@@JohnB-dr8sk I have not figured out the cause with certainty, and if spending $59 on this 'new' striker design makes it so that the next 100 rounds go bang correctly, then I am good with this as EDC. My XMac mag holds 17 rounds, btw, and my XL mag 15 rounds.
Are upgrade slides typically having the notch where the spring sets. even though not necessary for current factory set up? Think of upgrading slide as next investment and would like to keep using this assembly upgrade too.
If you dont have the channel for the new cap spring can you still install the titanium striker assembly and just put the original end cap back on ?
I’ve owned a pps and never in my life taken the firing pin out to clean…20 years and shoots fine. Is this really that big of a deal?
Have there been any light strikes??
25,000 rounds in our most shot assembly without one! We shoot only factory ammunition.
I don't knock any aftermarket parts, it just scares me to install them and when i need it it doesn't fire.. My EDC is always stock because of it..
Taurus is making SS retaining cups for some of their striker fired firearms. I would love to see someone solve the plastic retaining cup issue. If weight is the issue with SS cups for Sig , maybe titanium cups?
I feel like titanium cups in a steel striker channel would cause gaulling and potentially galvanic corrosion.
Would this go in a M17? This is a core piece and I’m interested in enhancing the reliability. Great video glad you’re back!!!’
Of course this gets released within 2 weeks of my buying the titanium performance striker, Short Stroke Flat trigger, and Spring kit 😑But at least my X Macro Comp runs great with the upgrades 🙂
If you already have our Titanium Striker, we do offer just the housing and back plate so you don't have to replace the whole thing: www.mcarbo.com/Sig-Sauer-P365-Steel-Striker-Housing.aspx
So to anybody that has installed their trigger, what was your solution for the safety lever that doesn't sit flush anymore? Alter the trigger bar? File the slide cap? Even though this is a well-known and widespread issue, macarbo hasn't cared enough to attempt to fix it, nor do they care enough to reply to people when you try to get a hold of them.
Wait what do you mean? Please explain? Do you mean for the models of the sig with a manual saftey?
Well done video, very high quality product. 👍🏻🇺🇸
The Myth, The Man, The Legend!!!! ❤🇺🇲
The mullett 😆
I’m getting 5 of these that way I have multiple replacements because after 500 rds of ammo I’m just replacing parts at that point. What good is a credit card if I can’t use the damn thing? I pay my bill every month in full means good credit.
Excellent video. I’m going to have to order one.
Side note, I have noticed that with my Macro Tac ops that without the striker return spring, the striker will rattle back and forth in the slide. If you hold the trigger to the rear, the striker will actually play peek a boo when you move the gun back and forth.
Sad thing is that you cant even buy it since its discontinued
what is discontinued? the macro tac ops? or the m carbo titanium striker assembly?
@@ayysung they're definitely still selling the striker assembly.. best upgrade hands down. Add to that the short stroke flat trigger and it's superb
Hello my slide is a sharps bros and it does not have the channel for the your pin, can i still use this and is there a kit that doesn’t have the sleeve and the pin??
Thought uncle rico started a gun channel to go along with his football videos
Holy cow I found the "If Butthead was a Sig Fanboy timeline! Dude you got to say"Fire" and"Damn It Bevis".
Wow this guy could sell ketchup popsicles to Eskimos 😂
Lol!
I'd go ahead and stick with the engineering over @ Sig any day..
Sig oem parts all the way baby!😮👍
Thanks sig you guys rock!
🔫
Midwest Gunworks sells replacement plastic striker sleeves for $19.95
Does this assembly go for the .380 as well of the P365?
Yes it will work with the .380 version!
I heard the mcarbo trigger upgrade contains a weaker striker spring that can strike weaker... is that true? I know that can lessen trigger pull.... but why?
Also why not just polish the striker?
Why a stainless steel housing and slide plate instead of aluminum?
Still having trouble with the physics here. A lighter striker and lighter spring has less potential and kinetic energy to deliver to the primer. Whereas the factory unit being heaver may or may not have a longer travel time after sear release, but it delivers more energy to the primer for assured detonation. I did buy your striker, found it not reliable and sold it off for $50.
I just ordered one I’m extremely excited I tried to clean my old one because my performance was poor and the plastic got ripped up when I was cleaning it .
I installed it and it's great... is it safe. Idk? Would love to see it tortured and proven that its as safe or safer than the OEM since the shape is slightly different. 😅
Anyone know if this makes the trigger feel any better? I hate the mush and heavy trigger
Will the SS stiker housing work with the stock striker and striker spring?
But what if we have one with a striker return spring in it. I have your striker and just got the cup and backplate in. Should I keep that small striker return spring inside the cup and transfer it over?
My slide doesn't have the pocket for the slide cap pin 😢
Are there any options aside from getting that pocket milled out?
Aftermarket slides. We have confirmed Zev and Zaffiri Precision utilize the slide cutout for the slide cap pin. We also have one in the works!@@Fried_PenguinWings
I would like to upgrade my P365XL trigger, but MCarbo wants to treat me like a car salesman. "If you want that, you'll have to pay extra." It's just not worth dropping $500+ on a $600 firearm to address the trigger. Better to learn to deal with your current setup and focus on other things. Maybe they'll create 1 item or pack to address everything for a far price... one day.
I don't blame MCARBO. I blame all the idiots who own P365s (and P320s) who continue to let SIg get away with massive fraud on their customers by selling them an obviously flawed pistol. People would NEVER allow this level of malfeasance after buying a new car. But because the 2A community are such corporate arse kissers (even after corporations have proven to all be working for the globalists) they literally bend over and scream "Sir may I have another one!" This gun is seriously flawed (as was my Gen 2 which developed light strikes after just 400 rounds) and people have to be crazy for relying on it for self defense.
You guys did it! I cant find those striker sleeves by themselves... Big issue. I'll have Danno at BILL JACKSONS pick this entire kit up for me. Rocking upgrade! Makes takedown and re-assembly similar to the rear plate on a glock, with the extractor plunger locking the rear plate on. Nice thinking.
SIG does recently sell the plastic striker sleeve piece by itself.
@@Tony-ix8wdI shouldn't have to replace the thing every time I take it down. Regardless if they have it or not now, I don't need it anymore... This upgrade shoots really well and works excellent for takedown and maint.
stand corrected, it's Midwest gun werks that sells the plastic sleeve replacement.
@@Tony-ix8wd Thanks I will keep that in mind for my customers.
so how much lighter is it?
That bent punch is driving me nuts...
Hahahahaa same here man
Fit P365 Axg Legion ?
Will this work with the new P365 AXG Legion?
Dumb question, but is itvthe same for the xl version?
Looks like this video was released about a year ago. Is there any real DATA showing any benefits for these Mcarbo upgrades? P.S. I've seen the data on the trigger upgrade which is good, but what about the striker ones? Thanks.
you said that the housing and cap are sold separately for those of us that bought the striker in the past but i dont see it on your website was hoping to pick it up during your black friday sale
Give us a call as we removed it from the site as people without our striker were purchasing it too. We now take it as manual orders.
How much is the reduction in trigger weight, if any?
I have a complete setup for my P365. It's actually fully overhauled with Icarus slide and XL+Macro grip, PMM comp, DPM kit, and all of the Mcarbo parts apart from the striker sleeve (out of stock at the moment)
The trigger is fantastic and not only lightened the pull to about 4lbs or so, it really helped smooth everything out. Another plus is that you have a screw that prevents overtravel. My setup was about $3,300 with the RMRcc, but I'm confident that I can outshoot almost anyone with more experience than I if they're using a stock pistol with an optic. I can consistently ring 10inch steel at 50+ yards with good cadence. It's scary how fast and accurate it is for the size/capacity.
@jwooldridge would the titanium striker improve trigger pull with the factory trigger?
I wish that back cover for the striker was just smooth like the stock one. Don't care for all those little dimples.
Weight comparison?
Why can Glock and others get it right and Sig is sleeping ?
They don't put enough time into R&D Research & Development, it cost money...
@@Rick-tb4soglock has had their fair share of issues I promise you
@@gabecastillo1634 Glock NEVER had issues like this. Yeah, occasionally Glocks have issues, but it's not because of their design. It's usually an issue that pops up right away when the gun is new, not after 400 or a 1000 rounds like Sig's P365 pr P320. Every gun maker has issues occasionally like Glock has had. But I have never seen a gun from a large, reputable manufacturer like Sig develop light strikes AFTER the gun is broken in. This video proves beyond all doubt that the P365 has a serious and unfixable design flaw with their striker system. People have to be crazy for relying on this gun for serious self defense.
@@JohnB-dr8sk they had a recall for the Gen 4, Glocks also have a major extractor issue, bottom line is all manufacturers fuck up then fix it, Glock grip angle is also a design flaw in itself lmao
@@JohnB-dr8sk it’s not hard to pull your weapon out of your holster without it going off but apparently that was an issue for officers who didn’t have the guts to say they did it but to each their own I guess, and might I add I think it was only 6 who reported on that specific issue
bro's got the jimmy neutron head
I'd like to replace my P365 Striker Safety, Take Down Safety, and Trigger Bar with precision stainless steel over unfinished MIM.
Why would I lighter p365 the gun us already snappy as is.
no we care about the haircut. rocks dude! fits you well. ok. now to watch the rest of the video.......
great video
Business in the front, party in the rear
Looks like a drill bit!😮
Love the sub2000 from you guys. It was cheaper than buying the parts and doing the work myself. Will this fit my P366X
Yes it will fit the P365X
😅😊😅
Simple solution to these expensive striker fired upgrades: Just go with an internal hammer fired pistol like the FN Reflex or S&W Equalizer. Here that SIg? Get rid of the crappy sponge trigger and replace it with an internal hammer system.
The women at the end did not add to the presentation. LOL
The plastic striker housing drives me crazy
Love your products. Dude, you need some lotion on your hands!🤣
Then, why make a Titanium Striker and put it in a Steel Channel in the first place? The channel is steel. The striker spring and striker housing is steel. All of it is wrapped around a Titanium Striker. So, the cups being Titanium also would not make a difference as far as galvanic corrosion. Titanium and Steel have been used together in many applications for a very long time. Galvanic corrosion would be caused by a softer metal with metallurgical properties farther away from each other, such as copper and certain high carbon steels.
Very nice.