Tactical Action Glocks     

By: Advanced Combat  Supplies

Art Schregardus          W10795 Mikard Rd,  Beaver Dam,  Wisconsin,  53916

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Welcome to Tactical Action Glocks! We are currently under construction, so please check back with many updates coming including news, photos, and ordering information! Please call Art at (920) 210-3348 for further information. We look forward to hearing from you!

 

Welcome!

 

Tactical Action Glocks starts with one gun and one man: David Maglio.     David Maglio

 

In 1993, David began shooting the handgun that calls itself perfection, the Glock. David was (and still is) a sheriff's deputy for a department in southeastern Wisconsin, and there was introduced to the Glock. As David was a student in Massad Ayoob's LFI-I class, he attended with his Glock model 23. It was at LFI that David had the New York 1 spring, or NY-1, installed on his G23.

 

As time went on, David learned that sending thousands of rounds downrange target practicing seemed to "break in" his Glock, because the more he shot, the smoother it felt. David noticed that critical components seemed to work together in a fluid manner in his primary firearm. Comparing his primary Glock to others he owned, he was soon able to low-heat and polish those internal components to make the rest of his Glocks as smooth as his primary.

 

David saw that the trigger surface of his full-size Glocks are smooth, but the compact and sub-compact models often have grooves and sharper edges. When shooting the smaller models, David found discomfort or a "pinch," especially after firing hundreds of rounds. David was able to the smooth the trigger surfaces of his compact and sub-compact models to duplicate the trigger feel of his full-size Glock on the smaller models.

 

The last piece of the puzzle came together when David looked at the frame and some of the smooth areas of his Glock. After all this time spent on smoothing and low-heat polishing, David "roughed" the grip, adding more surface area to where your hand comes in contact with the gun. David calls it the "GRIPple," or the stippling of the grip...

 

...and the TAC-Pack, or Tactical Action Carry Package, and Tactical Action Glocks were born!