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Beretta PX4 – Stealth Levers Installed!

Last night, I installed the stealth decocker levers I got from Brignoliarmi.com.  The package also came with one slide lever.  I’ve opted to not change that…not sure what such a change entails but it has to be easier to install than the decocking levers were.  As well, I do believe Brownells sells a plug for the right side of the gun that will have a hole where the lever would’ve been (after I swap out the old part for the new).  I’m thinking on ordering that part.  Anything to slim down the the profile of the PX4.

Some pics:

Before the lever swap
Before the lever swap
After the lever swap
After the lever swap
After the lever swap
After the lever swap
The packaging
Backside of the packaging

They were somewhat difficult to install.  I’ve not done such a thing before.  Well, let me restate that.  I’ve never removed roll pins from guns that didn’t involve changing out backstraps.  This wasn’t a simple backstrap change.  It wasn’t super complicated, either.  I used Mrgunsngear’s video to assist me in changing the parts.  (Note:  you do not have to remove the extractor to change out the safety levers.) The most difficult part was in getting the roll pin out.  Getting it back in was easy.  Another thing that stumped me was the spring…I didn’t reinstall it correctly and had to remove the roll pin again, then reinstall the spring correctly, and THEN reinstall the roll pin AGAIN.

I also might need a new punch, as the punch that I bought from Lowes was beat the hell up after the swap (bent at the tip).

Note that this does change the mode of operation for this particular gun.  It was sold to me as an F Type.  It is now a G Type (the new parts are labeled as G Type and the gun now functions a a G Type).  Prior to the parts change, the gun’s levers functioned as both a safety and decocker (they were not dedicated to either function).  The levers now function solely to decock.  They will NOT safety the trigger, and the lever now springs back into place after the gun has been decocked.  For me, it is easier to train with DA as a first shot than it is to train to carry cocked and locked (meaning that I’ve to ensure the safety is off before I pull the trigger, and also always ensure the safety is engaged when it’s holstered).

The gun does look cleaner, profile-wise.  It also carries somewhat better, as the new levers are no longer pushing on the material of the N82 Professional holster.  Still, the gun is thick.

No amount of parts replacement will change the fact that the slide is over an inch thick.  This is the ONLY negative of this firearm.  I’ll have to grow used to it.

The gun is definitely easier to rack with the new levers.  But the gun is also difficult to decock because the new levers have less traction…it almost makes me miss the old levers.

UPDATE:  The stealth slide lever is in.  I installed it a few hours after I posted the above.  Not sure if I like the hole that was left after removing the right side old lever.  Also not sure why Beretta didn’t make replacements for both sides.  (There’s only one replacement…the left side…the old right-sided lever has to come out to get the left-sided stealth one installed.)

UPDATE #2:  I ordered the slide catch plug at Midwest Gunworks.  The part arrived quicker than I’d anticipated.  I had issues understanding how to install it.  I went to a Beretta forum (berettaforum.net) to ask how PX4 owners have been installing the part.  Apparently you’ve to push down and turn so that the plug locks in, only this is difficult to do.  A forum user stated he’d used rubber from some gun grips to get traction on the plug without damaging it…I had a some Hogue grips and used them to turn the plug and it worked.  Here’s a picture of how the gun now looks with the plug installed —

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