Mmmmm.... Meatballs.,...If yer lucky, the mag will be full of meatballs...
Mmmmm.... Meatballs.,...If yer lucky, the mag will be full of meatballs...
When I really started kicking actually pulling the trigger on a Beretta, but didn't have funding for a new model, these were strongly in the running. They were $275-300 at the time. I got funds for a new one (now have four of the damn things), but have yet to acquire a 92S. Heard plenty of good things about them, not a bad gig for a historic piece.
IIRC, some later 92 models are ambidextrous safety-wise. The mag release (I think?) is always on the left side though.Do they have leftie models?
IIRC, some later 92 models are ambidextrous safety-wise. The mag release (I think?) is always on the left side though.
The 92S was designed for righties.
The mag release on the Model 92, beginning with the 92FS (maybe even the 92F), is reversible without tools. The 92S mag release is already ambidextrous, being a heel release and all. The Model 92 has had an ambidextrous safety or decocker since the 92F; the 92S is unique among the 92s with a slide-mounted safety or decocker insofar as its safety is not ambi.IIRC, some later 92 models are ambidextrous safety-wise. The mag release (I think?) is always on the left side though.
The 92S was designed for righties.
Good to know, thanks.The mag release on the Model 92, beginning with the 92FS (maybe even the 92F), is reversible without tools. The 92S mag release is already ambidextrous, being a heel release and all. The Model 92 has had an ambidextrous safety or decocker since the 92F; the 92S is unique among the 92s with a slide-mounted safety or decocker insofar as its safety is not ambi.
Enter your email address to join: