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Member |
After a two month wait I picked up my new Wilson Combat Centurian Tactical last evening: Ordered it with the action tune with the chrome silicon springs. Awesome trigger, very smooth and light. I really like the Hackathorn front sight. It really stands out. Not 100% sure about the ultra-thin grips yet. May swap them out for the same type that are on my Brig Tac. [IMG:left] [/IMG] | ||
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Member |
Sweet. I have about 500 rounds thru my Wilson Centurion and its flawless. I also have a regular centurion that i tricked out with VZ grips, a skeletonized hammer and D spring. It was already from the metal parts era so the trigger and safety levers were all steel. I have to say, the Wilson trigger is much better than my stock Centurion even with the D spring. The other noticeable issue are the sights. The Wilson sights are so much easier to use. Love the Beretta platform. | |||
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Member |
Glad to hear you are happy with your Cen Tac. Love mine! However I experienced a first for a Beretta 92 after shooting several different models over 25 years... SIG Elite and Remington UMC ran fine. With WWB I experienced several fail to fire! Next trigger pull lit them off. I am not upset about it as I know it is very lightly sprung and if I continue to see this I will just install a heavier mainspring. | |||
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addicted to trailing-throttle oversteer |
Hmm. Didn't realize WWB use hard primers. Reliable operation, the bane of tuned guns. So it seems even WC isn't immune to pushing it too far. | |||
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Rail-less and Tail-less |
Yup WWB is notorious for hard primers. Guys with tuned Glocks get lite strikes all the tme with them. _______________________________________________ Use thumb-size bullets to create fist-size holes. | |||
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Member |
I didn't realize WWB had a reputation for hard primers either. My Brig Tac with the action tune with the chrome silicon springs, and all my P226's with 17lb mainsprings run 100% with WWB, although that ammo isn't my go to range round. Not disappointed in the Cen Tac because of this. I love the trigger but realize it has a light mainspring. | |||
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Member |
There is a long thread on the Beretta forum about the Brig Tac in which Bill Wilson himself, and a couple WC CS guys participated. Very informative!! This very topic was discussed (ftf with tuned guns.....) and some really good information was provided. | |||
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War Damn Eagle! |
I really want one of those... | |||
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It's my way or the Highway |
Unfortunately due to some law Wilson won't tune the gun with the their trigger bar if the gun is new. You would have to send it back to them once you take possession of the weapon. The Wilson trigger bar adds more hammer arc so in DA the hammer travels back a little more and gives reliable ignition. It also adds a fitted over travel stop. I personally can't think of a better upgrade to the 92 than the WC trigger bar. | |||
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Member |
If given the option to own only one of these current WC Beretta's would you guys choose the Centurion or Brigadier Tactical? Always wanted a Beretta and it would mainly be used as a range toy. Thanks | |||
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Oriental Redneck |
Didn't realize about the Centurion's shorter slide and barrel. What kind of upgrade are you talking about. The Brig Tac obviously has the beefed up slide, but the Centurion, I see no difference from the regular slide. Q | |||
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Member |
According to Bill Wilson in the video he and Ken Hackathorn made about the Cen Tac the slide on the Cen Tac is a shortened Vertec slide. The slide is listed as a shortened Vertec slide in the specifications of the pistol on the WC web site also. The Vertec slide had two distinguishing features compared to the standard slide. First, it featured a front sight dovetail. Second, it is thicker width wise than the standard slide. The brig slide is wider side to side with the area where the locking block locks being taller also. I don't have a set of calipers with which to measure the width of the slide, nor do I have a standard 92fs either , so I can't tell you how much wider it is. | |||
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Member |
sprg03-A3, Thanks for the detailed write up. I have been leaning towards the Brig Tac for a fun range gun and will be picking one up. I don't think one could really go wrong with either. The Cent Tac felt awesome at the local gun shop and the trigger was really nice even without the action tune. Thanks again. | |||
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Member |
Sure thing. Glad to help. Hope I didn't waste your time by loading up my response with information you already knew. I know it sounds cliche' to say that you can't go wrong. I think the full-size pistol, all else being equal, makes for a better range pistol which will be shot alot and carried little. Beyond all that, IMHO if you were going to buy THE Beretta I think the WC is the way to go. You won't get the combination of the all-metal parts, 'G' decocker, checkered frame, upgraded sights that are also upgradeable, stainless shortened barrel with the target crown and updated slide, most of which can be very expensive to get done, otherwise unless you do the work yourself or pay to get it done. You certainly can get a Beretta cheaper, and keep in mind it still is a Beretta manufactured pistol, but you get just that, a perfectly good but cheaper Beretta. | |||
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Member |
Just picked up a like new non railed centurion that is going to wilson and then to Ernest Langdon OP -I'll swap you my standard WC grips for your ultra thins.This message has been edited. Last edited by: ruger357, ----------------------------------------- Roll Tide! Glock Certified Armorer NRA Certified Firearms Instructor | |||
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Member |
Cool!! That must be pretty hard to come by. Enjoy! | |||
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Member |
I agree with everything sprg03-A3 has related and it's not just because I picked up my Wilson Combat Centurion tactical yesterday too! The only thing I can add is that my Timney trigger gauge lists the DA pull as 6.25 lbs and the SA as 3.25 lbs. The action is very smooth and on Monday I'll see if my impression changes after a trip to the range. Nothing is foolproof to a sufficiently talented fool. | |||
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Oriental Redneck |
Seems that the Centurion is a little more expensive than the Brig Tac, both action tuned. Any ideas why? Q | |||
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Member |
The Cen Tac comes with the mag guide installed. It is an 'option' on the Brig Tac. I have it in both as I don't care for the looks of the lanyard loop, and think it's kinda cool ! Also, if this is important to you the Brig Tac comes with three 15 round mags, the Cen Tac with two 17 round mags and one 20 round mag. | |||
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