
On top of that, it’s probably the best value for a trigger job out there. I’m here to tell you, LTT’s “Trigger Job In a Bag” is literally a close as you can get to a custom trigger job, without having to ship your pistol off. One thing I didn’t mention was that my 92G was worked on by another well-known Beretta gunsmith, and I’ve shot a few “slicked up” ones as well.

The single action pull with crisp and clean, with no over-travel. To say it was smooth would be an understatement. There was zero, and I do mean zero, stacking in double action mode. This was down from the factory pulls of 11.3 pounds and 6.6 pounds, respectively. The double action pull came in at 6.8 pounds, and single action was exactly 3.5 pounds. I’m here to tell you, his kit isn’t 90 percent of a custom trigger job it’s more like 98 percent! If you own a Beretta 92, you need to buy this kit! (It’s been stated that you can potentially run into primer ignition issues if you go below 12 pounds.) I decided to go with the 12 pound mainspring since shoot the pistol in IDPA. Installation Results – Beretta 92 with Langdon Tactical’s “Trigger in a Bag” Langdon Tactical lists the expected trigger pull weights post-install with their corresponding mainspring weight as: Start to finish, installation took me about 45 minutes – and that was including multiple rewinds of the videos. I’d venture to say that Berettas are one of the easier pistols out there to work on. However, watching Ernie’s YouTube installation video and one or two others made installation a breeze. I was a little… anxious, you might say about taking the Beretta all the way apart. I’ll be honest, before the kit showed up, the extend of my gunsmithing skills had been installing Apex Tactical trigger kits into M&Ps and the occasional deep Glock cleaning. (The trigger bar, hammer, hammer strut, and sear come pre-polished and stoned.) (12, 13, & 14 pound are the standards options listed – I went with the 12 pound spring.)

Touted as equivalent to 90 percent of his custom gunsmith work, it had my attention. And while I was at it, might as well bling it up with some Wilson Combat grips, steel guide rod.Ībout this time Ernest “Ernie” Langdon with Langdon Tactical Technologies came out with his Trigger Job In A Bag. While I was at it, I figured I’d drop in the seemingly-mandatory “D” spring as the factory trigger pull, well… stunk.

It was completely stock and I intended to leave it that way.Īfter a while the thumb safety started bugging me, so I order the “G” conversion kit. When my father passed away, I inherited his M9A1. For those of your not familiar, on “G” models the safety lever acts only as a decocker. Anyone will tell you, once you go “G”, you never go back. It wasn’t until relatively recently that I finally picked up one.

Martin Riggs and John McClane did for Berettas what “Dirty Harry” Callahan did for S&W Model 29s. As a child growing up during the 80s, it’s no surprise my first “gun crush” (and likely MANY others like myself) was a Beretta 92.
