Echo40
Member
- Joined
- Sep 25, 2017
- Messages
- 4,040
- Reaction score
- 7,866
So I've owned a California Highway Patrol 4006TSW for a year now, and I absolutely love it.
It's a fantastic all steel pistol with an excellent trigger, but I've had one issue with it since day one -- the grips.
My CHP 4006TSW came from a lot that had been fitted with Hogue Rubber Grips, which are nice and obviously help soak up recoil, but unfortunately they just don't fit my hands well at all because they add too much thickness to the already wide grip of the 4006TSW.
Since the day that I bought it I have been tempted to swap out the Hogues for a nice slim pair of KSD wood grips, but I have been repeatedly dissuaded from doing so because people online make removing/replacing the grips sound akin to performing surgery or diffusing a bomb, with long, intimidating descriptions of the process which honestly make it sound like one wrong move can damage the pistol.
Can someone here put my mind at ease by providing a more simplified description which doesn't presume that I'm a clumsy buffoon with 5 thumbs on each hand? Because I'd really like to replace the grips on my 4006, but I'm terrified to even try at this point thanks to everyone online making it sound so difficult, not to mention potentially harmful to perform.
It's a fantastic all steel pistol with an excellent trigger, but I've had one issue with it since day one -- the grips.
My CHP 4006TSW came from a lot that had been fitted with Hogue Rubber Grips, which are nice and obviously help soak up recoil, but unfortunately they just don't fit my hands well at all because they add too much thickness to the already wide grip of the 4006TSW.
Since the day that I bought it I have been tempted to swap out the Hogues for a nice slim pair of KSD wood grips, but I have been repeatedly dissuaded from doing so because people online make removing/replacing the grips sound akin to performing surgery or diffusing a bomb, with long, intimidating descriptions of the process which honestly make it sound like one wrong move can damage the pistol.
Can someone here put my mind at ease by providing a more simplified description which doesn't presume that I'm a clumsy buffoon with 5 thumbs on each hand? Because I'd really like to replace the grips on my 4006, but I'm terrified to even try at this point thanks to everyone online making it sound so difficult, not to mention potentially harmful to perform.