Description

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Diamondback Firearms is proud to present the DB9, a micro-compact 9mm pistol made entirely in the USA. Designed with safety in mind, the DB9 features a "ZERO-Energy" striker firing system with a mechanical firing pin block, a steel magazine catch to secure a sheet metal magazine and real windage-adjustable sights, all in a lightweight pistol. A steel trigger with dual connecting bars allows for a crisp, smooth, trigger pull. The DB9 features a FEA (Finite Element Analysis) designed slide and barrel that is stronger than any comparable firearm, resulting in durability with less felt recoil, and the absence of removable pins or tools makes field stripping easier than ever. The slide, barrel, and internal parts are coated to resist corrosion, making this pistol a lifetime investment.

Specifications
SKU 178230512
UPC 815875011217
Brand Diamondback
Model Name DB9
MPN DB9
Caliber 9mm
Class Subcompact
Action Striker Fire Action
Capacity 6+1
Barrel Length 3"
Length 5.6"
Weight 11 oz.
Sights Windage Adjustable Sights
Grip Standard
Trigger Standard
Safety No Manual Safety
Finish Black Polymer
Condition New in Box

UPC#: 815875011217

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Comments (32)

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A sub compact 9 for under 200....come on common sense dictates that it is a POS....lmao

0 votes
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I have never had any problems with mine. It's fine for what it's designed for. A very small, pocket carry 9mm for up close defense.

1 vote
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Would you recommend this gun as a bigginer for shooting range practice i ask this because i got my daughter interested in wanting to learn

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Not a beginners gun, while its small enough for smaller hands, the recoil is a bit much and for reliability of cycling, form will be important in any subcompact 9mm under 20oz and this one only weighs 11. This particular pistol was intentionally designed without either a slide lock/release or a safety to save weight but are features very important for new shooters. Start kids out on a 22 that has virtually no recoil and a let less noise. I dont even use this gun for extended shooting range practice due to the recoil/size ratio, I use it for EDCC, dump a couple of mags on each range trip to check reliability, maybe 20 rounds, and then switch to larger/much heavier guns with better sights, safeties, longer barrels, bigger mags etc. The DB9 was designed for conceal carry, to be carried often and (hopefully) not fired much, only when needed. In todays market, you can buy a pistol today, use it for awhile and then sell it for about what you paid for it, especially if you find it thru this website so start her out on something like a Ruger SR22, easy to load and cheap 22LR. Having owned both and been very happy with both, thats what I would do.

2 votes
0 votes

25 bucks more and get the much better Ruger EC9s

2 votes
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The Ruger is 50% Heavier and thus is less ammo sensitive.

0 votes
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Add your comment here...Ruger EC9s

0 votes
0 votes

Don't buy from RK guns. They just stiffed a bunch of us on a rifle they had on sale and cancelled our orders.

1 vote
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Worst gun I’ve ever bought

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Yikes. I thought the same but sent it in for warranty work and they did quite alot of work. Adjusting the breach and a polish job off the top of my head. It worked for awhile but every 200 rounds I have to repolish the feed ramp.

0 votes
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Saw a brand new one not make it through its first magazine today without some type of failure every trigger pull, on the 7th shot the trigger broke.

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Wouldn't surprise me to find out they didnt read the manual and were using +p or over 124gr ammo. The gun only weighs 11oz so there is a limit to how much stress it will take, I read the manual first and use 115gr Fed, Champion, S&B, and WWB and haven't had a problem.

0 votes
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I was skeptical of this gun when I bought it. The gun dealer called me stupid etc. I immediately cleaned it oiled it and took it to the range. I then proceeded to dump 50 rounds of tula through it as fast as I could and the gun ran flawlessly. I personally run Liberty Civil Defense 50 grain 9mm through mine without problems. I will say this isnt a deal. My local dealer through his supplier was about to get me the stainless slide for 20 dollars cheaper than this price. That being said and although I carry this gun it likely will be retired for a G43.

1 vote
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This is a dumpster fire of a handgun. Have sold four to customers, all came back with reliability problems with WWB, AE, and UMC 115gr. I wouldn't give $50 for one.

0 votes
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I'll be happy to give you $50 for every one that comes back.

0 votes
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I like the .25 acp best. it's a humdinger of a pistol setup in that caliber.

0 votes
2 votes

Is that a real caliber? I can't seem to find them with this gun. I think I like this size, however.

0 votes
0 votes

Another idiotic comment from gun.deals resident short-bus rider.

3 votes
0 votes

Another witticism from gun.deals resident take-it-in-the-ass-until-he-bleeds faggot.

0 votes
0 votes

Mr Personality himself speaks.

1 vote
1 vote

I bought one of these and sent it to the factory after the first time taking it out. Jam-o-matic. But I got it back and it worked... For a few hundred rounds. Then I had to polish the feed ramp. It works fine if you polish the feed ramp and use ammo under 115gr. And make sure the only hollow points are the 115gr umc 100 Rd bulk pack. That's the only hollow points I found to work.

0 votes
1 vote

Mine has been 100% reliable on 115gr FMJs AEagle and WWB, and 99% reliable on Fed Classic 115gr JHPs. I think a lot of people fail to read the manual that tells them nothing more than 124gr and no +P, which IMHO is a totally reasonable limitation given the entire DB9 is only 11oz of mass, and the mass absorbing recoil and cycling the slide even less. There is a reason nobody makes one smaller or lighter for double the price, you have to appreciate the engineering. With that said, if yours doesnt function reliably with 115gr FMJs in the first two hundred rounds, given the lifetime warranty, I would send it back to the factory until it does because the bottom line is, the lighter and smaller the ccw weapon, the more often you will carry. And if you ever lose it, or god forbid have to use it in self defense, its only $200 sitting in the evidence room for a couple of years.

0 votes
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I thought I had mine figured out, but I'm still having enough issues that I wouldn't carry it. I'll try the UMC ammo, thanks for the tip.

0 votes
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My suggestion is to send it in for service until its reliable with 115gr FMJs, then if you have any concerns at all about JHP's, carry one in the pipe and then fill the mag with JHP's except for the top round, go with a FMJ. From feedback at the owners forum, feeding issues with <124gr JHPs usually occur on a totally full mag when the tilt of the round is just different enough to cause the rough edge of the JHP to catch the bottom of the feed ramp. I had two such jams in the first 50 rounds when I tried JHPs that have since worked flawlessy and those jams are a bugger to clear with no slide lock! Some guys at the forum have had success on the earlier models by cutting off the last bend of the mag spring but before I would start altering anything, I'd send it in for warranty.

0 votes
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This firearm would have been a great success if it wasn't for the reliability issues

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Mine's been great. Quality issues for the first generation were readily admitted by all, including DB. They then invested a whole lot of money in the factory. Watch the Tour of DBack Factory on YouTube and tell me what isnt quality now, 100% American made, you will also notice an almost empty cabinet of warranty repairs on the tour so if you follow instructions and are using <124gr brass cased ammo and have issues with a modern day DB9, send it in for service on the lifetime warranty and it will be back in a couple weeks.

0 votes
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Gotta be better than my taurus pt111 g2

0 votes
5 votes

The mew pt111 g2 in 9mm
I bought at cabelas last x mas. Ive shot it dozems of times. Carry it every day. Paod 200 bucks for it. The trigger snap is far back but other than that the taurus pt111 g2 is the best gun you can buy for the $period.
Not one jam no malfuntions ever. I also carry an MP shield 9 mm. Besides the trigger on the MP , id shoot the taurus all. Day before the shield.

0 votes
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So if I was to pay for this today how long would it take for me to receive my handgun?

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At only 11oz versus the competition at 17-23, and being small enough to fit in my back jeans pocket, the DB9 has become my EDC on most days not using a belt holster (I do use a Boraii pocket holster for the DB9 that covers the trigger). When carrying IWB then I go with my full featured LC9s with tritium night sights and laser. But the weight and size factors make me more than willing to do without the upgrades or even a slide lock on the DB9. I've seen cheaper deals on the DB9 in the last six months but anywhere under $200 is a good price.

0 votes
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Not a deal...

0 votes
0 votes

Agreed. Id buy a 60 dollar co2 bb gun to carry nefore this. Its like a plastic nerf gun. But shoots a 9mm. If this was chambered in 22 itd be fine. Buy the kel tec pf 32. Anyone looking to buy a small pocket gun
Get the glock 42/43 or sprongfiepds xds. Spend the money.
Amd youll never have to second guess amything.

0 votes
0 votes
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