I got my copy today. It's an hour long. The first few minutes are kind of a quick history of Kahr. The first half is about taking it apart... removing the slide and stripping it. The last half is about the frame... really why I wanted it.
http://www.thecountryshed.com/agi_pistol_dvd.htm

It's not an Armorer's manual... just the guy taking the pistol apart. I could do the first half and wanted to help him by making the clothes-hanger "C"-clamp.
The last half is what I wanted information on... the frame with the trigger, trigger bar, the cam and the ejector. I've seen the whole video... about one hour... and the last 30 minutes are what I needed to see. I guess it was worth the $28+ including shipping for that. Newbies can really benefit from the whole thing, but use the "C"-clamp described in the stickies here for the slide disassembly.
He thought the striker assembly being wet was a good idea.
The whole gun was like new from the factory and dripping.
I've spent more money on worse things, so it's not a bad buy. Just remember, it's a disassembly and then re-assembling of the CW9, though it covers all of the polymers and some of the basics that the metal pistols share.
I noticed that he didn't use a Torx screwdriver or stress not over tightening the sideplate screw into the plastic frame. I could see room for improvements but it's definitely helpful.
Wynn
http://www.thecountryshed.com/agi_pistol_dvd.htm

It's not an Armorer's manual... just the guy taking the pistol apart. I could do the first half and wanted to help him by making the clothes-hanger "C"-clamp.
The last half is what I wanted information on... the frame with the trigger, trigger bar, the cam and the ejector. I've seen the whole video... about one hour... and the last 30 minutes are what I needed to see. I guess it was worth the $28+ including shipping for that. Newbies can really benefit from the whole thing, but use the "C"-clamp described in the stickies here for the slide disassembly.
He thought the striker assembly being wet was a good idea.
The whole gun was like new from the factory and dripping.
I've spent more money on worse things, so it's not a bad buy. Just remember, it's a disassembly and then re-assembling of the CW9, though it covers all of the polymers and some of the basics that the metal pistols share.
I noticed that he didn't use a Torx screwdriver or stress not over tightening the sideplate screw into the plastic frame. I could see room for improvements but it's definitely helpful.
Wynn

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