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need opinion good or bad- also used pistol price on this model thanks | ||
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His diet consists of black coffee, and sarcasm. |
Reports in print and on the internet I have read (to be taken with a grain of salt) generally indicate it is a reliable (i.e., feeds, fires and ejects without issues) gun, but has accuracy problems having to do with the way the rifling is made. I have actual experience working on Daewoo-built cars - total steaming turds. Granted, a gun is much less complex machine than a car, but I'm permanently soured on anything Daewoo. | |||
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It's no longer available in the US as far as I know. Parts will be scarce. If you're looking for a similar size and capacity handgun that is low priced but very high quality, I can recommend the EAA Witness/SAR BP line. In plastic they go for 250 or less new, in steel a hundred bucks more. They take CZ mags, which are inexpensive. I picked up a purple SAR compact for about 220 last year, it's a great truck gun when I don't want to carry a custom CZ. | |||
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Isn't it now the Lionheart? For ME: DA/SA=Sig 9mm or HK P30 LEM 9 Striker fired= Glock 9mm If it's a .45= 1911 Suppressed= HK in .45 I like anything in 10mm | |||
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Knows too little about too much |
As I recall - accuracy and the over complicated lock works killed it here. A curiosity only for most now. RMD TL Davis: “The Second Amendment is special, not because it protects guns, but because its violation signals a government with the intention to oppress its people…” Remember: After the first one, the rest are free. | |||
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I bought a Daewoo DP51 right around the time they were first introduced over here. I think I paid $300 for it at the time. They will take S&W 59 series magazines and it has that unusual Tri-Action trigger system. It's more of a novelty for me now, but it's not a bad little gun. Accuracy is decent and it runs well. They are sold under Lionheart name these days and I've seen them quite a bit at gun shows recently. | |||
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I have owned one for several years. I like it although for me it was more of novelty. I have not shot it in a long time and not very much. When I did shoot it I never had any problems with it and it was relatively accurate. Not sure about repair parts if needed. The Second Amendment to the United States Constitution. A well regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed. As ratified by the States and authenticated by Thomas Jefferson, Secretary of State NRA Life Member | |||
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all I can say is I think they quit making track hoes!! those are called doosans now. | |||
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I owned one as my very first pistol! For what I paid for it, it was not bad. I did have to replace a couple of springs, and they were hard to acquire even then. The takedown process was not elegant at all. After locking the slide back, a pin had to be manually pushed out to disengage the slide. As already mentioned, one of the peculiarities of this pistol was its so-called "triple action" or Tri-Action. In addition to being double action or single action, the hammer can be manually pressed forward. This left the hammer down with the hammer spring under tension; the pistol could then be fired from hammer-down with a single action trigger weight. I never had any misfire or feed problems with it. | |||
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