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StarONE Sight Pusher Tool Heavy Duty Special for Square Slide with Dovetailed Sight

  • Based on 1,897 reviews
Condition: New
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Color: Basic


Features

  • Universal handgun sight pusher tool makes a perfect fit for square slides,not for angles or notched slides like XD, XDM or Shield.
  • Sight pusher tool have vertical adjustment and a Ridged solid jaw to support the slide and not allowing it to easily move in a vertical or horizontal direction while in use.
  • Sight pusher tool is designed to adjust or replace dovetail handgun sights.
  • Made of 6061 Aluminum.
  • Easy to use, recommend you wrap your slide in a folded up paper towel or other material to protect your slide.
  • IF YOU RECEIVE ANY DISSATISFACTION,PLEASE CONTACT US.

Brand: StarONE


Color: Basic


Style: Classic


Sport: Airsoft


Item Weight: 12.8 Ounces


Material: Aluminum, Plastic


Compatible Devices: Handgun


Mounting Type: Dovetail Mount


Night vision: No


Brand: ‎StarONE


Color: ‎Basic


Style: ‎Classic


Sport: ‎Airsoft


Item Weight: ‎12.8 Ounces


Material: ‎Aluminum, Plastic


Compatible Devices: ‎Handgun


Mounting Type: ‎Dovetail Mount


Night vision: ‎No


Item Package Dimensions L x W x H: ‎5.39 x 3.86 x 1.38 inches


Package Weight: ‎0.39 Kilograms


Item Dimensions LxWxH: ‎5 x 1.3 x 3.7 inches


Brand Name: ‎StarONE


Manufacturer: ‎Riwful


Included Components: ‎sight pusher


Date First Available: August 19, 2020


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Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • A little common sense goes a long way
Color: Basic
After reading some of the reviews I was half expecting this to be a fail, but for the price, it was worth taking a look at. All I can say about many of the bad reviews is.... OPERATOR ERROR! I just used it to switch sights on 5 different slides and it works flawlessly with very little effort. It is now much easier to see exactly where some of the bad reviewers were going wrong. In the gallery photo by Pith, the slide isn't secured tightly between the blocks. The slide is also too low and should have been raised so the push arm is making contact with the base of the sight in the dovetail itself, not the top of the sight. That creates a cross lever action that will cause binding rather than applying horizontal push power. Think of a glass. If you apply pressure at the base of the glass right at countertop level it slide across the surface easily. If you only push at the top rim, it's more difficult for the base to overcome the friction and you are just as likely to tip the glass over rather than slide it. Common sense folks! The other issue in that photo.... the pusher is being used backwards. The side of the rear sight in the photo is slanted so the slanted side of the pusher should be used to meet and push evenly across the slant of the sight instead of one sharp point of the pusher only exerting pressure at a single point in a polycarbon (plastic) rear sight. Again, common sense folks! As far as bending the whole frame of the tool... my guess is that the push arm was not aligned to run within the dovetail track, but likely misaligned and pushing into the frame itself. The arm has nowhere to go against solid metal and the light aluminum frame, of course, is going to deform long before you're able to push the pusher arm though a solid metal frame. That's actually a good thing! The tool will fail before you do serious damage to your slide upper. Common sense! Not enough room to get the new sight started in? How about you lightly tap the new sight in part of the way so there IS enough room and do the more difficult and finer pushing with the tool, as intended? If it's much harder than it really should be... you're probably doing it wrong. Take a step back and rethink. Common sense! Pros: The tool works perfectly. The price is incredible. What more can one say? It does exactly what it is supposed to and requires minimal effort without leaving a single mark on the slide or the sight itself. Cons: Biggest... setting the proper alignment can be a little tricky and takes exponentially more time getting it just right than it does to actually push a sight. Clamping the tool in a vise gives you that third hand you wish you had and makes it incredibly easier, but it still takes a bit of finesse and double checks to get it aligned. In practial terms, using it for fine tuning POI on a non adjutable rear sight is going to be tedious. Once the slide is removed to test fire, if more adjustment is needed, the whole finicky alignment process starts all over again. It's not "prohibitively" tedious since you only have to sight in your firearm once, but it's not much fun, either. The nutshell: It's definately not a commercial grade tool. For the home amateur gunsmith that needs to push a sight every once in a great while and you're okay with having to take a few more mintues getting the alignment set... and the $ savings is key... it is more than capable of getting the job done. Not as easily or as quickly, but $20 vs $100+ to do the same thing? It's your call! ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on November 26, 2022 by Mick

  • Junk
Color: Basic
This unit was garbage. Not sure if it was previously used and returned, but it arrived DOA. The main sight mover part would drag on the top frame. The threads on the main bolt were cross-threaded and the sight pusher was stuck to it. I added a bunch of WD40 to work it loose. The other end of the main bolt had a lock nut on it, but turning the handle end of the bolt to move the sight pusher tightened the lock nut in the process after a few turns, thus preventing the sight pusher from moving further. Ended up taking off the lock nut and washer, and guiding the sight pusher by hand, while turning the handle end. The adjustment piece to raise/lower the gun slide up to the sight pusher was stuck - could not loosen or tighten it so it was not stable. The 3rd adjustment piece for side-to-side movement did not attach to its adjustment bolt - the bolt just sits in a hole in the side, thus making it very unstable. Pretty much need 3 hands to hold all of the parts in the correct place, then a 4th to twist the knob to move the sight pusher. The side slide-clamps are all just metal - no foam, rubber, or plastic so it scratched the finish off my slide when trying initially to get it in position. Ended up using a piece of cardboard moving forward to try again. Ended up returning this unit after 90 minutes of messing with it. This was on sale for $20 for Black Friday. I guess "you get what you pay for" on these types of items. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on December 1, 2022 by Cale Johnson

  • It works, but
Color: Basic
It works, but it's really not good. I grabbed this after realising the Vism universal rear sight pusher couldn't do front sight installation (which is my fault for assuming it could). After much fiddling and swearing I got my slide afixed and aligned in the tool, and I got my new front sight positioned at the start of the dovetail. I began to crank it into place, and as the pusher moved inexorably down the screw threads, my entire slide rotated in the jaws of the tool. So I backed off, reset, clamped the fixture on my slide with as much force as the Chinesium threads would take before shearing, and again began cranking the pusher into the front sight. Again, the slide rotated. This time, seeing that the pusher would still clear the top of the slide without gouging into it, I persisted. After a number of degrees of cant, the slide finally took up the slop from the barely toleranced tool, and the force began to transfer into the front sight. I redoubled my efforts, and millimeter by millimeter my new front sight slid snugly into its dovetail. I avoided maring my slide through a rather judicious application of gaffers tape which supplemented the polymer inserts they provided for the clamps. It was also very important to carefully position the slide in the tool so that the pusher would act along the base of the front sight (to avoid shearing the sight post off) without being low enough to scrape the slide. Doing this in such a way as to account for the rotation of the slide in the tool was quite the difficult task. As I backed off the screw of the pusher, part of the threads from the tool came with it, essentially making this a one time use product. All that being said, it did work! I got my front sight pushed on and well centered, with the sight sitting flat and flush in its dovetail. With any luck, I won't need to push another one on for quite some time. It was difficult to set up, there were a lot of potential areas where I could have ruined my slide, the sight, or both, and the tool essentially self destructed after one use. But I'm willing to bet it was a lot cheaper than having an armorer at the local gun store do it. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on March 2, 2022 by The Laughing Man

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