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NSPEC Innovations carries pistol parts for the most widely owned handgun platforms in the United States, including Glock, 1911, Sig Sauer, and Smith & Wesson. Whether you're upgrading sights, swapping slides, adding a light or laser, or sourcing a replacement component, browse by platform below or use the filters to find exactly what your build requires.
Glock pistols are among the most modified handguns on the market, and for good reason: the aftermarket support is unmatched across any other pistol platform. NSPEC's Glock parts selection covers the full range of upgrade and replacement components, including complete slides with optic cuts and ported barrels, slide assemblies compatible with RMR and similar optic footprints, drop-in barrels in caliber-conversion configurations, night sights in standard and suppressor height, flared magwells, grip and magazine extensions, triggers and lower parts, and muzzle brakes and thread protectors. Most Glock-compatible parts in our inventory are designed to fit Gen 1 through Gen 5 frames unless otherwise specified on the product page, so confirm compatibility with your specific generation before ordering.
The 1911 has been in continuous service for over a century, and its single-action trigger and grip angle remain a preferred platform for competition shooters, collectors, and those who simply prefer the feel of a hammer-fired pistol. NSPEC's 1911 parts inventory includes sights in standard and night-sight configurations, including Novak-cut rear sights and compatible front sights from Vigilance Innovations. The 1911's widespread adoption of standardized machining specifications means many components are broadly compatible across manufacturers, but always verify your frame's specific cut and fit before purchasing fitted or tight-tolerance parts like barrels and slides.
Sig Sauer pistols span a wide range of platforms, from the modular P320 and P365 series to the classic P226 and P229, each with distinct frame architectures and parts compatibility requirements. NSPEC's Sig Sauer pistol parts selection covers components for popular Sig platforms, including sights, grip modules, and accessories suited to both full-size and compact configurations. Because Sig's lineup spans both traditional metal-frame and polymer-frame designs with different generations and sub-variants, confirm the exact model and generation of your pistol before ordering any part that interfaces with the frame or slide.
Smith & Wesson's M&P series has grown into one of the most popular duty and personal defense platforms in the country, with a parts ecosystem that continues to expand as the platform matures. NSPEC's Smith & Wesson pistol parts selection includes components for M&P and related S&W pistol platforms. As with other polymer-frame pistols, M&P parts compatibility can vary between generations and compact versus full-size configurations, so verify fitment against your specific model before ordering.
Sights are the single most impactful upgrade most pistol shooters can make, and the options have expanded considerably as pistol-mounted optics have become standard on duty and competition pistols. NSPEC's pistol sights and optics selection includes tritium night sights in standard and suppressor height for Glock-compatible and 1911 platforms, ghost ring night sight configurations for faster target acquisition in low light, and dovetail-mounted micro optic adapters for pistols without a factory optic cut. Night sights use tritium vials that glow without batteries, making them a reliable low-light option for home defense and carry pistols where electronics could fail.
A light or laser on a defensive pistol closes the gap between identifying a threat and engaging it in low-light conditions. NSPEC's pistol lasers and flashlights are compatible with common rail-equipped pistol frames. When selecting a light or laser, confirm that the mounting interface matches your pistol's rail specification, since Picatinny and proprietary rail systems are not interchangeable on most compact pistols.
Pistol upgrades tend to fall into a few clear categories. Understanding what each component affects helps you prioritize which upgrade delivers the most benefit for your specific use case, whether that's competition, carry, home defense, or range training.
Slides and Barrels are the most significant upgrades for shooters looking to add optic compatibility to a pistol that did not come with a factory cut. A slide with an optic cut allows direct mounting of a red dot or similar pistol optic without adapter plates, which keeps the sight as low as possible over the bore and simplifies the overall profile. Ported barrels redirect gas upward to reduce muzzle flip. Aftermarket barrels in conversion calibers, such as a 9mm barrel for a Glock 22 chambered in .40 S&W, allow the same frame to run a different cartridge with a barrel swap and compatible magazine change.
Triggers and Lower Parts directly affect break weight, reset distance, and overall trigger feel. Stock Glock triggers run between 5 and 5.5 pounds with a relatively long take-up and reset. Aftermarket trigger groups can reduce pull weight, shorten reset, and improve the overall consistency of the break, which translates to tighter groups and faster follow-up shots. On a carry pistol, trigger work requires careful consideration of the safety implications of a lighter pull, so understand what you're changing before installing a competition-focused trigger in a defensive role.
Sights are the first upgrade most instructors recommend before any other modification. Factory sights on most production pistols are functional but not optimized for low-light use or fast target acquisition. Tritium night sights provide a visible aiming reference in the dark without batteries. Suppressor-height sights raise the sight picture high enough to see over a suppressor can, which is useful on threaded-barrel builds even if the pistol is not running a suppressor, since they also cowitness well with many pistol red dots.
Magazines, Grips, and Extensions affect both capacity and ergonomics. Magazine extensions add rounds to your standard magazine count and can extend grip length on compact pistols for better control. Flared magwells speed up reloads by creating a wider funnel for magazine insertion, which is primarily a competition-focused upgrade but has practical value in any situation where a reload under pressure matters. Grip extensions on compact pistols allow a full three-finger grip without pinky curl, which improves control and reduces felt recoil.
Lights and Lasers attach to the accessory rail on rail-equipped pistols and serve different functions. A white light is essential for positive threat identification in low light before engaging. A laser allows accurate fire from unconventional positions where a traditional sight picture is not possible, and also serves as a training tool for diagnosing trigger movement issues. Combined light and laser units are available for shooters who want both functions in a single unit.
Not necessarily. "Glock-compatible" means the part is designed to fit and function in a Glock-pattern pistol, but it is not manufactured by Glock and may differ in materials, tolerances, or finish. Many aftermarket Glock-compatible parts from established manufacturers meet or exceed OEM specifications, while lower-quality options may not. Always purchase from reputable manufacturers and verify that any safety-critical component, such as a trigger group or firing pin assembly, is rated for defensive use if that is your intended application.
It depends on the part. Sights, magazine extensions, grip panels, and most accessory rail attachments can typically be installed at home with basic tools. Slides, barrels, and trigger group components vary: some are direct drop-in fits that require no fitting, while others need timing, fitting, or staking by a qualified gunsmith. Complete slide assemblies are generally designed to swap without tools beyond disassembly of the pistol. If you're unsure whether a part is a true drop-in or requires fitting, review the product description or contact NSPEC before ordering.
Standard height sights are designed to give a correct sight picture at normal pistol sight radius with a standard muzzle profile. Suppressor height sights are taller, allowing the shooter to see over the body of a suppressor or compensator without losing a usable sight picture. Suppressor height sights are also commonly used on pistols with mounted red dots as a backup iron sight system, since the taller height often allows them to cowitness through or alongside the optic window depending on the specific red dot's height.
A barrel swap alone is not sufficient for a reliable conversion. A .40 S&W to 9mm conversion on a Glock 22 requires a 9mm conversion barrel and 9mm magazines, since the .40 S&W magazine will not reliably feed 9mm cartridges. The slide and recoil spring assembly from a Glock 22 will often function with a 9mm conversion barrel, but reliability can vary depending on the specific barrel and ammunition combination. A dedicated 9mm magazine is the most important part of making the conversion function correctly.
The most common optic footprints on Glock-compatible slides are RMR (Trijicon), Shield RMSc, and Holosun 507/508 series, with many slides offering a pattern that accepts multiple footprints via adapter plates. The RMR footprint is the most widely adopted and has the broadest optic compatibility. If you plan to mount a specific red dot, confirm that the slide's cut matches that optic's mounting pattern before purchasing, since footprints are not universally compatible and most optics require the correct cut to sit at the proper height.
No FFL is required for pistol parts. Components including slides, barrels, triggers, sights, grips, magazines, and lights ship directly to your door without an FFL transfer. The only component of a pistol that legally qualifies as the firearm itself, and therefore requires FFL processing, is the serialized frame or receiver. Complete slide assemblies, even those that include a barrel and all internal components, do not require an FFL.
A flared magwell is a funnel-shaped extension that attaches to the base of the pistol frame around the magazine opening and widens the entry point for faster, more forgiving reloads. Under normal range conditions a magwell is not necessary, but in competition or high-stress situations where a reload needs to happen quickly, the wider funnel reduces fumbled insertions significantly. On compact pistols, some magwells also add enough grip length to accommodate a full firing grip. The main tradeoff is added bulk at the base of the grip, which can affect how the pistol sits in a holster.
Not always. The M&P platform has gone through meaningful changes between the original M&P, the M&P 2.0, and compact versus full-size variants, and some parts do not cross over between generations. Grip modules, sights using the same dovetail spec, and rail-mounted accessories are often compatible across a wider range, while internal components like trigger groups, barrels, and slides are more generation-specific. Always confirm compatibility with your exact model number and generation before purchasing.
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