
Glock Generations Decoded: Gen1 to Gen5 Changes That Matter
A clear, hands-on walk through Gen1 to Gen5 Glock differences you can actually see and feel, plus quick ID cues, useful markings, and a 10-minute inspection plan.
Call us any time at: (833) 486-6659
A factory target is a paper shooting target, typically a bullseye or group target, that was produced at a firearm manufacturer’s facility by firing the specific serialized firearm in question during its pre-shipment accuracy and function testing. Factory targets accompany the firearm throughout its commercial life as primary documentation of the manufacturer’s quality control process and, in the case of precision firearms, as evidence of the accuracy standard the piece achieved when it left the factory under controlled conditions.
Factory targets are most commonly associated with premium and precision firearms, custom shop pistols, target pistols, match-grade rifles, and high-end bolt-action platforms, where demonstrated accuracy is a principal selling point. Manufacturers who provide factory targets with their firearms are making an explicit representation that the specific piece has been tested and has met or exceeded a stated accuracy standard. For a precision bolt-action rifle sold with a sub-half-MOA guarantee, the accompanying factory target is the documentary evidence of that guarantee’s fulfillment, a tangible record showing the specific group fired at a stated distance from the specific serial number being purchased.
For collectors, factory targets have value beyond their documentation function. A factory target with a tightly centered group, bearing the manufacturer’s stamp or authentication, the date of testing, and ideally the signature of the inspector or test shooter, is a fascinating primary document that provides a direct connection to the moment the firearm completed its manufacturing process. When a target accompanies a firearm that remains in new or unfired condition, the target represents the only shooting that piece has ever done, a unique historical record.
Factory targets are most desirable when they remain with their original associated firearm, are clearly marked with the relevant serial number, and have been stored without significant deterioration. Separated from their associated firearm, targets have limited collector value, but properly paired, they contribute meaningfully to a firearm’s completeness and documentary record.
Showing 17–32 of 111 resultsSorted by latest
Showing 17–32 of 111 resultsSorted by latest

Available
View Item
Available
View Item
Available
View Item
Available
View Item
Available
View Item
Available
View Item
A clear, hands-on walk through Gen1 to Gen5 Glock differences you can actually see and feel, plus quick ID cues, useful markings, and a 10-minute inspection plan.

A practical collector’s guide to the Winchester Model 70. Quick ID of Pre-64, Post-64, and Classic; CRF vs push-feed; triggers; stocks and barrels; serial dating; and a no-nonsense inspection checklist.
From Tikkakoski’s barrel shop to Sako’s Riihimäki plant, this is the real story behind Tikka’s T3 and T3x. We cover actions, barrels, triggers, model lines, and what matters to buyers and collectors.