Description
The PF320PTEX™ Grip Module is P80®’s first polymer grip designed for compatibility with SIG SAUER® components for P320™. Designed and manufactured in the U.S.A., the PF320PTEX™ Grip Modules are made with P80’s proprietary blend of high-strength reinforced polymer, and feature P80®’s next generation ergonomics for operators, law enforcement and civillian P320™ owners. Polymer80® products are known for aggressive enhancements to grip shape and angle, with features including: 1911 Grip AngleP80's Signature PTEX™ Grip TextureHigh Beaver Tail Undercut for Better Bore AccessEnhanced Double-Undercut Trigger Guard and Support Hand ContoursModified Proprietary Ambidextrous Magazine Release PF320PTEX™ Grip Module is Compatible with the following products:P320™ Full & Carry SlidesP320 X5™ Full & Carry Slides,P320 VTac™ Slides.
MPN#: P80-PF320
Comments (9)
The grip module is pretty useless if you can't get the parts to build it into a working pistol. Stick w/ the DIY Glock kits for now; the P320 will still cost you far more to get the crucial parts than it does to just go out & buy a new one...
You’ve never owned a P320, have you. This isn’t a serialized platform that you’re building a p320 from. This is an accessory to go with your P320. I have 3 different grip modules for mine and they each take less than a minute to swap out. My X-Carry module supports the full size 17 round mags, if I wanna go smaller, I swap it out for my X-Compact module that supports the 15 round mags. The fire control unit is the only part of the gun that counts as a firearm, the same way the stripped lower is on an AR-15.
I bet this polymer stuff won’t be around in 50 years. Why they use it so much. An all metal gun would last centuries. Polymers are unknown.
Hope you don’t play the futures market...
Boy, I bet you still have a VCR too.
All metal lasts until it corrode from neglect.
Take this into consideration, if we take a metal 1911 frame and a polymer p320 frame and bury them in damp soil and leave them for 3 years which one is more likely to be structurally sound upon reassembly? I definitely would not want to be the tester of the 1911. Polymer has merits.