TFB FIELD STRIP: Beretta M9A3 Pistols

The Beretta M9A3 pistols are a tactical or duty variant of the iconic 92 product line designed for personal defense, law enforcement and military applications. Although not an official entrant, the Beretta M9A3 pistols were considered by some to be a contender for the replacement for the M9 pistol issued to U.S. Armed Forces prior to the MHS competition that ended in early 2017. The M9A3 is chambered in 9mm, features an accessory rail and has a threaded barrel. The falling locking block design of the Beretta 92 is considered by some to be more accurate and act as a better suppressor host in contrast to other designs such as Browning’s tilting barrel action.
In this field strip article, the FDE M9A3 is equipped with a combination manual safety and decocker on the rear of the slide. The black M9A3 is only equipped with a decocker.
REMEMBER the four rules of gun safety:
- All guns are always loaded.
- Never let the muzzle cover anything you are not willing to destroy.
- Keep your finger off the trigger until your sights are on the target.
- Be sure of your target and what is beyond it.
TFB FIELD STRIP: Beretta M9A3 Pistols
The official Beretta 92 owners manual can be found in the links below.
Buy Beretta M9A3 Pistols From Brownells
We are committed to finding, researching, and recommending the best products. We earn commissions from purchases you make using the retail links in our product reviews. Learn more about how this works.

Comments
Join the conversation
A discussion of field stripping the Beretta without mentioning Jet Li? Mediocre!
"Although not an official entrant, the Beretta M9A3 pistols were considered by some to be a contender . . ." Leaving aside the sloppiness of that sentence (were they contenders prior to the MHS competition, or does "prior to . . . " refer to the M9?), the only people who would consider them contenders don't understand how government procurement works. Only official entrants can be considered (that's why there are official entrants), and considering something that's not entered is illegal. It may have happened 50 or 60 years ago, but it won't now. The "best" entrant may not always win, but the winner has to be an official entrant.