Military releases report on Sig M17/18 accidental discharge

For me it has to do with how the grip and trigger reach fit my hand.

If you happen to have smaller hands or shorter fingers, the small hand specific PDP-F is really nice to use.
I also have the PDP Pro SD Full Size 5.1" and the PDP Match Full Size Steel Frame 5".
The steel frame Match is one heavy pistol and is a joy to shoot. I liked it more than my factory CZ Shadow 2 OR, so I sent the Shadow 2 to CGW to see if they could make it have a better trigger.
It competes hard with the current generation SIG P226 XFive, (which costs more)

What I'd like to get next is the PDP Compact Steel Frame 4" and compare that side by side to a CGW CZ Shadow 2 Compact.

Then I'll try sending the P-10 to CGW and see how it is when it comes back.
My current favorite (to shoot) is the Walther PDP pro. I am strongly considering getting the Steel Frame version and switching the trigger to the Pro trigger (I just like it better). My CGW Shadow 2 shows up early August :D
 
Does anyone have an idea of what’s happening internally on the AD’s with no drop or trigger pull? I’m surprised that this problem extends to the m17-m18 being that they have a safety. Although o confess I don’t own one and have no idea how they work. All my SIGs are DA/SA and I love them.
The only things I can think of, and this is going off of how glocks are built, is that either the sear is bending, allowing the striker to slingshot forward, or the striker lug is shearing. Either way though, I'm not sure how the striker defeats (what I'm assuming) the striker stop plunger (what glock erroneously called a firing pin safety) because if that's not depressed, the striker cant contact the primer. So Im totally confused. If a glock striker's lug sheared, it STILL wouldn't get anywhere near the primer... I am 100% convinced, the sig contract was given the same treatment as the ACU contract. All sorts of "labs", "independently confirmed" through "thorough testing" the superiority of the universal camo pattern... And allllll the top brass and SESes were like "Yea, I see now" while shaking their heads-and not a single one of those cocksuckers raised their hands during testing and said "But....there's no silver or grey in the woods..."
While the Sigs were shitting the bed, the glocks were just running and running, and no one said a thing lol.
 
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100% It was the unit cost for the pistol of something below $350 versus almost $700 for the Glock.
Probably, but just like every program manager that ever lived, they always think of up front costs over total lifecycle costs, and it always backfires. Over all, over the service life of a glock, you'd be way ahead due to RAM (reliability, availability,maintainability) costs (not having to fix any breakages, and if you did, it's super cheap and simple) but no one listens to that.
NOW tell me where they're at in costs, now that all this bullshit with the M17 is going down. Sure it was cheaper, but IS it, when your weapon system's down, and on the deadline report for who knows how many weeks? What good is price savings if you dont have the widget you paid for lol.
 
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Probably, but just like every program manager that ever lived, they always think of up front costs over total lifecycle costs, and it always backfires. Over all, over the service life of a glock, you'd be way ahead due to RAM (reliability, availability,maintainability) costs (not having to fix any breakages, and if you did, it's super cheap and simple) but no one listens to that.
NOW tell me where they're at in costs, now that all this bullshit with the M17 is going down. Sure it was cheaper, but IS it, when your weapon system's down, and on the deadline report for who knows how many weeks? What good is price savings if you dont have the widget you paid for lol.
I am the part owner of a gun range in Houston. We have a rental fleet and just for fun I am going to do some groups of pistols in terms of reliability. We shoot the pistols to the point of failure, they all make money over their life so there comes a point when we just add a new pistol to the display rather than repair a pistol. Keep in mind these pistols are shot hard, treated poorly, rarely cleaned, ect.

Group 1 - Glock we have nine or ten in our rental fleet. We have never had to replace any of them. On our Glock 19 (most rented pistol) and Glock 43X (3rd most rented pistol) They have both gone over 100k rounds without any failures. On our Glock 34, we had to replace a main spring when it was not going fully into battery somewhere around 70k rounds. We field strip and clean every 10 to 15k rounds.

Group 2 - Not a Glock but pretty close. S&W M&P 2.0, CZ P10, Walther PDP, HK VP9. These pistols are right there with the Glock, almost. Extremely reliable and trustworthy.

Group 3 - Almost anything ever made by HK. The P30, the USP, the MK23 HK 45. They are all tanks. They all have variants that are designed to be suppressed and they function flawlessly. They never break. We do have to clean them to keep them functioning more often then Glock. We do not have a 2000 in the fleet so I can't vouch for that pistol. The SP5s last forever, there are some pins that break and need to be replaced in the 10 to 12k round range but this was by design apparently (they are sacrificial).

Group 4 - CZ hammer fired pistols like the 75 and Shadow 2, Various Sig pistols like the 226 and family derivatives. Again these are kind of like the HKs in that they last a really long time. The metal frame guns require more cleaning then the polymer but if you do it, they are just as reliable think cleaning every 2k rounds or so.

Group 5 - High end 2011s - Our second most rented pistol is the Staccato P. We are at 70k rounds through it with no failures due to breaking. We have had to replace the main spring every 6 to 8k rounds and you have to clean them based on the weight of the main spring. By that I mean if you have a 2011 from someone like Atlas, Staccato, ect to achieve a soft felt recoil they will put in a lighter main spring. The lighter the spring the more you need to clean it so that it won't get gunked up and not go into battery. As an example we can go 2 to 3k rounds on the Staccato P before cleaning compared to sub 1k on the Staccato XC.

Group 6 - Everything else made


Group 1 and 2 are in my personal circle of trust. If you need a pistol that is going to go bang no matter what the circumstance, these are my picks. Group 3 and 4 are in my circle of trust but you need to maintain them more then group 1 and 2. Group 4 and 5 are also in the circle of trust but again with more maintenance then groups 1 through 4.

I am certain that someone here has a pistol that I did not list and has had phenomenal results with them. I do not doubt that for a second. I am simply listing pistols that go through extremely high rates of fire and how they do over time. If you think that the average pistol owner shoots a couple of hundred rounds a year then the list of acceptable is probably much longer. At the end of the day, for pistols and for ARs, anything that I might use to defend myself with I value reliability over everything else.
 
I am the part owner of a gun range in Houston. We have a rental fleet and just for fun I am going to do some groups of pistols in terms of reliability. We shoot the pistols to the point of failure, they all make money over their life so there comes a point when we just add a new pistol to the display rather than repair a pistol. Keep in mind these pistols are shot hard, treated poorly, rarely cleaned, ect.

Group 1 - Glock we have nine or ten in our rental fleet. We have never had to replace any of them. On our Glock 19 (most rented pistol) and Glock 43X (3rd most rented pistol) They have both gone over 100k rounds without any failures. On our Glock 34, we had to replace a main spring when it was not going fully into battery somewhere around 70k rounds. We field strip and clean every 10 to 15k rounds.

Group 2 - Not a Glock but pretty close. S&W M&P 2.0, CZ P10, Walther PDP, HK VP9. These pistols are right there with the Glock, almost. Extremely reliable and trustworthy.

Group 3 - Almost anything ever made by HK. The P30, the USP, the MK23 HK 45. They are all tanks. They all have variants that are designed to be suppressed and they function flawlessly. They never break. We do have to clean them to keep them functioning more often then Glock. We do not have a 2000 in the fleet so I can't vouch for that pistol. The SP5s last forever, there are some pins that break and need to be replaced in the 10 to 12k round range but this was by design apparently (they are sacrificial).

Group 4 - CZ hammer fired pistols like the 75 and Shadow 2, Various Sig pistols like the 226 and family derivatives. Again these are kind of like the HKs in that they last a really long time. The metal frame guns require more cleaning then the polymer but if you do it, they are just as reliable think cleaning every 2k rounds or so.

Group 5 - High end 2011s - Our second most rented pistol is the Staccato P. We are at 70k rounds through it with no failures due to breaking. We have had to replace the main spring every 6 to 8k rounds and you have to clean them based on the weight of the main spring. By that I mean if you have a 2011 from someone like Atlas, Staccato, ect to achieve a soft felt recoil they will put in a lighter main spring. The lighter the spring the more you need to clean it so that it won't get gunked up and not go into battery. As an example we can go 2 to 3k rounds on the Staccato P before cleaning compared to sub 1k on the Staccato XC.

Group 6 - Everything else made


Group 1 and 2 are in my personal circle of trust. If you need a pistol that is going to go bang no matter what the circumstance, these are my picks. Group 3 and 4 are in my circle of trust but you need to maintain them more then group 1 and 2. Group 4 and 5 are also in the circle of trust but again with more maintenance then groups 1 through 4.

I am certain that someone here has a pistol that I did not list and has had phenomenal results with them. I do not doubt that for a second. I am simply listing pistols that go through extremely high rates of fire and how they do over time. If you think that the average pistol owner shoots a couple of hundred rounds a year then the list of acceptable is probably much longer. At the end of the day, for pistols and for ARs, anything that I might use to defend myself with I value reliability over everything else.

So it sounds like if you want to use and abuse your pistol like a cheap hooker then the Glock 17/19/43 is the way to go.

If you want a bit more class and are willing to treat them a tiny bit nicer, the H&K VP9 and Walther PDP are excellent.

If you like taking good care of your guns and keeping them clean and lubed and such, then pretty much everything CZ and H&K and hammer fired Sigs and such are great.

If you like treating your guns with lots of care and taking really good regular care of them and swapping out springs on schedule the 2011 style would be a good choice for you.

Have you tried any experiments to see how using standard gun oil / lube as opposed to some of the higher end grease stuff affects things?
 
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So it sounds like if you want to use and abuse your pistol like a cheap hooker then the Glock 17/19/43 is the way to go.

If you want a bit more class and are willing to treat them a tiny bit nicer, the H&K VP9 and Walther PDP are excellent.

If you like taking good care of your guns and keeping them clean and lubed and such, then pretty much everything CZ and H&K and hammer fired Sigs and such are great.

If you like treating your guns with lots of care and taking really good regular care of them and swapping out springs on schedule the 2011 style would be a good choice for you.

Have you tried any experiments to see how using standard gun oil / lube as opposed to some of the higher end grease stuff affects things?
No.

The 2011s get actual prescribed products, so specific oil, specific grease. Everything else gets blasted with CLP.
 
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And thus begins the yearning for the simple days of the early M9s when slides cracked and locking blocks broke.

-Stan
Yea, but that shit was taken care of and it never happened again. But THESE sorts of malfunctions that the M17s are experiencing are inexcusable. I understand things breaking, but firing and ending some people's careers? That's just wrong. Not enough R and D in my opinion.
 
Yea, but that shit was taken care of and it never happened again. But THESE sorts of malfunctions that the M17s are experiencing are inexcusable. I understand things breaking, but firing and ending some people's careers? That's just wrong. Not enough R and D in my opinion.

It seems in any of the handful of events, they have not been able to replicate the event with the same pistol.
I wonder if it has something to do with cleaning/maintenance/assembly or such where something like dirt or too much lube or something is getting in somewhere and causing it or some seating problem because of very close tolerances?
 
Yea, but that shit was taken care of and it never happened again. But THESE sorts of malfunctions that the M17s are experiencing are inexcusable. I understand things breaking, but firing and ending some people's careers? That's just wrong. Not enough R and D in my opinion.
Seems like SIG uses the end user for R&D and issues and 85% solution that is constantly “improved”
 
@ut755ln

Any Sig 320 or M18/17 at your facility?
Yes, we have 3 iterations of the 320 in the fleet. We have a M17 and two or three 365s.

To get to the point of the article, we have not had a gun discharge in a holster but the rental guns are never in a holster. What we have had is cracks in the polymer frame develop (several times, Sig frames not aftermarket). We had a slide stop break, a firing pin break, there have been some other failures.

Lets set the safety issue aside for a minute and I will explain why the 320 is a group 6 pistol from my above post. To me the reason to have a polymer framed striker fired pistol revolves around weight savings, reliability, and ease of maintenance. The 320 with its FCU has almost twice the number of parts compared to a Glock. A lot of really small pins and springs and forgings that are difficult to replace. We have never had a 320 make it past 30k rounds. We usually have maintenance issues with them and our gun smith hates them because they are difficult to work with. Because of the cost of repair, we just decommission them and put in a new pistol. We have had relatively few issues with the 365, in my opinion it is a better pistol then the 320.

When it comes to sales, we are not Sig direct because Sig is a giant asshole company and to work with them you have to carry everything they sell including things like air rifles so we buy from distributors. The 365s sell really well, anything we get in from that family of pistols sells. The 320s also sell well.

I have always been more pistol guy and ar guy, I come to this forum and have been learning about precision shooting but I have picked up some things on ARs, software, gear reviews, handloading, ect. This place is an incredible storehouse of knowledge.

When it comes to pistols I currently own:
6 Glocks 34 x2 17 x1 45 x1 47 x1 43x x1,
2 Walthers PDP Pro x 2,
5 HKs SP5 SP5K VP9 P30 USP 45,
2 Beretta two Langdon Tactical M9s
2 Staccatos a P and a XC
1 Les Baer .45 because Murica
I have an Alchemy double stack 1911 on order

My daily carry is the Gen 5 Glock 45, on occasion it is the 43X. I shoot something like 1500 plus rounds a week, more when I go to competitions. Because of the number of rounds fired I really value reliability over everything else. I think that almost any modern striker fired pistol is probably okay for most people. I think that most of our customers spend too much time hopping from pistol to pistol, or tricking them out one way or another. I think that they should buy one of the really reliable pistols and spend their time and money practicing and on lessons.
 
I've owned Glocks thru gen 4, but once the striker pistols came out from H&K, Sig, CZ, I just don't have any interest in Glocks. I'n sure the Glock gen 5 are great, but I feel the above three have out-Glawked them. People like what they like. The striker pistols from Walther and Beretta look good too.
 
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I'm not arguing that incidents have occurred, but the article seems written to continue the narrative the New Hampshire author prefers. The USAF incident at Tinker happened after the weapon had slide issues at the clearing barrel, was field stripped, had a function check, put back in service, then discharged in the clearing barrel. In another incident (Army), the troop could not recall if he had chambered a round as during the preparing for duty process he took a facetime call.

So, of the nine incidents, maybe two are suspect? Maybe more? My point focuses on the USAF security forces being early adopters and fielding the M18 soonest. In active, reserve and guard units there are 20,000 security forces troops. Each has an assigned sidearm they draw each time they go on shift and get ready to assume a post. There are thousands of sidearms issued daily across the USAF and each is issued by the armorer, loaded at the clearing barrel, safety dis-engaged and then holstered for the duty shift. The process is reversed when the troop comes off duty. Rinse and repeat 24/7 and you have thousands of "transactions" daily and probably hundreds of thousands since the USAF Sigs were fielded.

Every discharge or injury is serious, I'm not disputing that fact, but I would have thought there would be many more discharge reports given the amount of weapons issued and their daily fielding.
 
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I'm not arguing that incidents have occurred, but the article seems written to continue the narrative the author prefers. The USAF incident at Tinker happened after the weapon had slide issues at the clearing barrel, was field stripped, had a function check, put back in service, then discharged in the clearing barrel. In another incident (Army), the troop could not recall if he had chambered a round as during the preparing for duty process he took a facetime call.

So, of the nine incidents, maybe two are suspect? Maybe more? My point focuses on the USAF security forces being early adopters and fielding the M18 soonest. In active, reserve and guard units there are 20,000 security forces troops. Each has an assigned sidearm they draw each time they go on shift and get ready to assume a post. There are thousands of sidearms issued daily across the USAF and each is issued by the armorer, loaded at the clearing barrel, safety dis-engaged and then holstered for the duty shift. The process is reversed when the troop comes off duty. Rinse and repeat 24/7 and you have thousands of "transactions" daily and probably hundreds of thousands since the USAF Sigs were fielded.

Every discharge or injury is serious, I'm not disputing that fact, but I would have thought there would be many more discharge reports given the amount of weapons issued and their daily fielding.
DoD said they're issuing M17/m18 pistols even to NCO squad leaders, which is a big change from the past. It appears most if not all the claimed p320 UDs were involving holstered pistols, or those being holstered or unholstered. Not a single report of a p320 firing while on a rack in a gun safe, or on a shelf in an armory.
 
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DoD said they're issuing M17/m18 pistols even to NCO squad leaders, which is a big change from the past. It appears most if not all the claimed p320 UDs were involving holstered pistols, or those being holstered or unholstered. Not a single report of a p320 firing while on a rack in a gun safe, or on a shelf in an armory.
Seems they should look at the level III retention holsters for pinch points or if the act of holstering and de-holstering moves the slide a significant amount that then introduces another variable. Adding lights with a Level III might also be something to explore.
 
I've owned Glocks thru gen 4, but once the striker pistols came out from H&K, Sig, CZ, I just don't have any interest in Glocks. I'n sure the Glock gen 5 are great, but I feel the above three have out-Glawked them. People like what they like. The striker pistols from Walther and Beretta look good too.

I'd say the Sig striker pistols are for the most part kind of not super inspiring in how the trigger feels if put up against the H&K VP9, CZ P10 and Walther PDP
 
I'd say the Sig striker pistols are for the most part kind of not super inspiring in how the trigger feels if put up against the H&K VP9, CZ P10 and Walther PDP
Not super inspiring is an understatement. Everyone likes to bag on the Glock trigger, but the 320 trigger is way worse.

But, as it is unmolested by any recall, my 320 might be a collectors’ item.

And, it has never dropped the striker except when the trigger was pulled.
 
I was issued a Glock in the USAF for 5 years. At first I hated it.

Then, after durability and reliability that cannot be adequately described, I warmed to it significantly.

I bought a 320 about a year ago, and it was the absolute worst pistol I have ever seen. No one who shoots pistols seriously would accept the shit manufacturing techniques and design of that pistol. Slop and complexity all throughout it like they think those are selling points. Also, sig designed the slide and frame size so that they could put bigger calibers than 9 in the same molds and forgings. Thus, if you are carrying a sig 9, you are actually carrying something closer to a 10mm size pistol than a 9.

I have a friend at the Tier 1 unit and I asked him about 3 months ago if they had the new 320 yet. He had no idea what the pistol even was and said "No man, we aren't giving up our Glocks for anything."

That should tell you all you need to know.
 
So about that.
Carry a H&K USP P30 or HK45 setup in the DA/SA configuration with the decocker and manual safety.
1. You can safely decock it.
2. You can then put the safety on while it's decocked

In my opinion carrying one of those H&K pistols decocked and on safe is "more safe" than trusting the safeties on a 1911

Or just get an H&K P7
Too bad all HK triggers suck ass
 
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Too bad all HK triggers suck ass
The p320 trigger is good compared to Glocks but that's not saying much. I prefer that it doesn't have a bladed trigger like my VP9. I think it was on another forum that a guy posted DEVGRU has been issuing P320 X Five models since 2019 and were using them without issues, but you'd probably have to take polls to know what they're carrying on missions because they have a variety in their equipment rooms. There was also something about the "p320 X Five with an X Carry kit" as a more recent change.
 
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The p320 trigger is good compared to Glocks but that's not saying much. I prefer that it doesn't have a bladed trigger like my VP9. I think it was on another forum that a guy posted DEVGRU has been issuing P320 X Five models since 2019 and were using them without issues, but you'd probably have to take polls to know what they're carrying on missions because they have a variety in their equipment rooms. There was also something about the "p320 X Five with an X Carry kit" as a more recent change.
My son is not with DEVGRU, who is stationed west coast but they use Glock 19s for the most part.
 
Reports are that Devgru were issued Sig 320 FCUs with Safety delete, along with two slide assys, two grip modules, etc, in the X Five/Legion/Xcarry config. Apparently DJ Shipley also mentioned it in a video. Army SF Groups have and use both Glocks and Sig m17s/m18s. Marsoc using both as well. Rumor is some elements in SoF aren't renewing Glock POs. There are also some pics of the above carrying, wearing, shooting, etc.

The militaries of Canada, Australia, Denmark, Sweden, are also using variants of the p320/m17/m18, so if it turns out the design has a dangerous flaw that causes spontaneous/uncommanded firing, it'll be exposed eventually.
 
So it sounds like if you want to use and abuse your pistol like a cheap hooker then the Glock 17/19/43 is the way to go.

If you want a bit more class and are willing to treat them a tiny bit nicer, the H&K VP9 and Walther PDP are excellent.

If you like taking good care of your guns and keeping them clean and lubed and such, then pretty much everything CZ and H&K and hammer fired Sigs and such are great.

If you like treating your guns with lots of care and taking really good regular care of them and swapping out springs on schedule the 2011 style would be a good choice for you.

Have you tried any experiments to see how using standard gun oil / lube as opposed to some of the higher end grease stuff affects things?
That's not what I read. CZs cannot be lumped in one group. They form three groups: striker fired, Omega hammer fired (P-07, P-09, 75 Omega, P-01 Omega), everything else. Those are listed in ascending order of maintenance needed.
 
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Reports are that Devgru were issued Sig 320 FCUs with Safety delete, along with two slide assys, two grip modules, etc, in the X Five/Legion/Xcarry config. Apparently DJ Shipley also mentioned it in a video. Army SF Groups have and use both Glocks and Sig m17s/m18s. Marsoc using both as well. Rumor is some elements in SoF aren't renewing Glock POs. There are also some pics of the above carrying, wearing, shooting, etc.

The militaries of Canada, Australia, Denmark, Sweden, are also using variants of the p320/m17/m18, so if it turns out the design has a dangerous flaw that causes spontaneous/uncommanded firing, it'll be exposed eventually.
Not always, mission specific, ect. There was a fight about carrying pistols at all because they are ineffectual. If you have a weapon malfunction, are out of ammo, ect they teach them to drop position in the stack and address the issue. Most of them prefer to carry more ammunition for their rifle and in general do not like pistols (any pistols).

The SF guys may have a completely different experience and thought process when it comes to hand guns. They have a very different budget to work with and longevity may not even enter into the picture when it comes to selection.
 
Not always, mission specific, ect. There was a fight about carrying pistols at all because they are ineffectual. If you have a weapon malfunction, are out of ammo, ect they teach them to drop position in the stack and address the issue. Most of them prefer to carry more ammunition for their rifle and in general do not like pistols (any pistols).

The SF guys may have a completely different experience and thought process when it comes to hand guns. They have a very different budget to work with and longevity may not even enter into the picture when it comes to selection.
The bottom line is that an anti-gun Leftist writer is the guy who writes most of the Sig p320 hit pieces, and I just saw a short summary of the "military's p320 ND issues", and none of them appear to be a p320 firing uncommanded in the holster despite the author's lies. Instead, two were at the clearing barrel, one was a troop who couldn't even remember if he'd chambered a round nor used the safety, and others were related to the act of holstering or unholstering.

The thread sure made for some entertainment, but in the end it's just a Leftist anti-gun writer and some Sig haters having a circle jerk!

With the DoD equipping NCO unit leaders with pistols, and the huge improvements in pistol training across the branches, there will be more troops carrying pistols than ever before and they'll be more effective with them than ever before.
 
The bottom line is that an anti-gun Leftist writer is the guy who writes most of the Sig p320 hit pieces, and I just saw a short summary of the "military's p320 ND issues", and none of them appear to be a p320 firing uncommanded in the holster despite the author's lies. Instead, two were at the clearing barrel, one was a troop who couldn't even remember if he'd chambered a round nor used the safety, and others were related to the act of holstering or unholstering.

The thread sure made for some entertainment, but in the end it's just a Leftist anti-gun writer and some Sig haters having a circle jerk!
No. There have been too many cases of unexplained discharges in holsters including experienced USPSA shooters, and SIG just lost a civil liability case over this problem.

This is more than a SIG hater circle jerk.

I do not know how or why these pistols allow uncommanded firing but I cannot trust them.


With the DoD equipping NCO unit leaders with pistols, and the huge improvements in pistol training across the branches, there will be more troops carrying pistols than ever before and they'll be more effective with them than ever before.
Huge improvements in pistol training? LOLOLOLOL
 
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I'm not arguing that incidents have occurred, but the article seems written to continue the narrative the New Hampshire author prefers. The USAF incident at Tinker happened after the weapon had slide issues at the clearing barrel, was field stripped, had a function check, put back in service, then discharged in the clearing barrel. In another incident (Army), the troop could not recall if he had chambered a round as during the preparing for duty process he took a facetime call.

So, of the nine incidents, maybe two are suspect? Maybe more? My point focuses on the USAF security forces being early adopters and fielding the M18 soonest. In active, reserve and guard units there are 20,000 security forces troops. Each has an assigned sidearm they draw each time they go on shift and get ready to assume a post. There are thousands of sidearms issued daily across the USAF and each is issued by the armorer, loaded at the clearing barrel, safety dis-engaged and then holstered for the duty shift. The process is reversed when the troop comes off duty. Rinse and repeat 24/7 and you have thousands of "transactions" daily and probably hundreds of thousands since the USAF Sigs were fielded.

Every discharge or injury is serious, I'm not disputing that fact, but I would have thought there would be many more discharge reports given the amount of weapons issued and their daily fielding.
I want to know how many incidents are not reported though.
 
And this isn't an anti Sig thread, as I'm sure many of us in this thread still own an older sig of some sort. My first carry pistol was a Sig SP2009 and I liked it. Though when I started competing I wanted something with a more consistent trigger pull so I sold it for a G19 and never looked back. It was a great pistol though, and everyone I know still loves the 226/228/229/210. They're all great guns, but the M17 blows. There's just too many real, unedited videos of cop's sig's going off while just sitting there in the holster doing nothing. Nevvvvvvvvvvvvver ONCE have I see a glock AD in a holster, completely untouched by human hands... I dont hate sig whatsoever. They put out some good shit, but every company makes a mistake once and a while, especially if there's a ton of that product produced.
 
DoD said they're issuing M17/m18 pistols even to NCO squad leaders, which is a big change from the past. It appears most if not all the claimed p320 UDs were involving holstered pistols, or those being holstered or unholstered. Not a single report of a p320 firing while on a rack in a gun safe, or on a shelf in an armory.

Pistols in a rack in a gun safe or armory generally are stored with an empty chamber.
Yes, I have one loaded pistol in my safe with a round in the chamber but the rest of them are cleared, hammer or striker released and stored.
I have Sig P226 Mk 25 threaded barrel and a pair of Walther PPQ's a .22LR and a 9mm Navy model . The sig broke and was repaired under warranty, the Walthers have been flawless.
I'll buy another Walther - a PDP long before a P320 or P365.
There is a used M11 Sig in the LGS for decent price though...
 
Pistols in a rack in a gun safe or armory generally are stored with an empty chamber.
Yes, I have one loaded pistol in my safe with a round in the chamber but the rest of them are cleared, hammer or striker released and stored.
I have Sig P226 Mk 25 threaded barrel and a pair of Walther PPQ's a .22LR and a 9mm Navy model . The sig broke and was repaired under warranty, the Walthers have been flawless.
I'll buy another Walther - a PDP long before a P320 or P365.
There is a used M11 Sig in the LGS for decent price though...

I'm probably going to keep an M17 and M18 as they are our current issued military weapons and I kind of like having one to be familiar with it.
Much like I had a Beretta 92FS for the same reason.

That being said, you should buy a Walther PDP-F then a PDP Match then a PDP Metal Frame
I think you'd have more fun with those than another M11 Sig
 
I'm probably going to keep an M17 and M18 as they are our current issued military weapons and I kind of like having one to be familiar with it.
Much like I had a Beretta 92FS for the same reason.
Probably the best argument for owning one, along with the fact that I expect the mags will become increasingly common and used by other platforms much as the Beretta mags were/are

The more I look into these things, the more I notice a trend: the reported events almost always involve a safariland SLS holster of some type, and are usually during reholster (or shortly after) by those who either have mediocre training, or are on the clock.

Correlation does not imply causation, but it would seem to me the culprit might be poor use / misuse of a more complicated retention design, especially since the SLS does interface with the slide.

Personally I love my Steyr L9A2. Not sure where it falls into the realm of how you folks rank pistols, but the grip angle and sights (and surprisingly nice trigger) are why you will have to pry it from my cold dead hands.
 
I'm probably going to keep an M17 and M18 as they are our current issued military weapons and I kind of like having one to be familiar with it.
Much like I had a Beretta 92FS for the same reason.

That being said, you should buy a Walther PDP-F then a PDP Match then a PDP Metal Frame
I think you'd have more fun with those than another M11 Sig
The stumbling point on the Sig M11, is the threaded barrel is an additional expense.
To get a threaded barrel installed in the PDP 4.5 length, you're in a pro series pistol with a $ 230 price increase.
 
To get a threaded barrel installed in the PDP 4.5 length, you're in a pro series pistol with a $ 230 price increase.

But you also do get a trigger upgrade to their better trigger from what I understand so, it kind of evens out.
But yes it would be nice if more folks made the threaded barrels a minimal cost upgrade.
 
A buddy of mine is a Trooper with the Oklahoma Highway Patrol. I don’t know specifics but I guess they’ve had a few Sig 320s discharge unintentionally. They are pulling all 320s from service and replacing with Glock 47s. Supposedly the 320 won’t even be approved for personal purchase and carry either.
 
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Yea, but that shit was taken care of and it never happened again. But THESE sorts of malfunctions that the M17s are experiencing are inexcusable. I understand things breaking, but firing and ending some people's careers? That's just wrong. Not enough R and D in my opinion.

Not really. 2010-2012 timeframe we were still routinely replacing broken locking blocks. Allegedly (I don't have documentation or expertise on this specific subject, over my pay grade) the goverment ordered a metric shit load of replacement parts right off the bat before the locking block thing was fixed so a lot of the replacement parts were the "old" design and the problem persisted.

Anyway, I remember 4 or 5 of our 90ish M9's being down at one time with broken locking blocks in the 2010-2012 timeframe.
 
Nope, this is not a drop safety thing. This is a striker dropping all on it's own, while no human is even touching it thing. There are videos of this happening.
Please share some. I have seen the drop videos. I haven't seen videos of them just going off in the holster with nobody touching them. I do want to see these videos.
 
A buddy of mine is a Trooper with the Oklahoma Highway Patrol. I don’t know specifics but I guess they’ve had a few Sig 320s discharge unintentionally. They are pulling all 320s from service and replacing with Glock 47s. Supposedly the 320 won’t even be approved for personal purchase and carry either.
It's a shame when quitting p320s that agencies won't instead go with CZ P10, HK vp, or even the p365 Fuse. And there are the Walthers, Berettas, and M&Ps. Glock is the only one with that fucked up grip angle and overall poor ergonomics, but I'd almost bet Glock won't let anyone beat their pricing- remember, coke and strippers!
 
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I was getting my AXG ready to go to the range from my safe.

I keep my pistols on a shelf, in a rack, the rack generally holding them muzzle down, blackstrap toward person at the safe door.

I inserted full mag of 17, racked the slide, than had to look around for my extra round to top the magazine.

I put the pistol back in the rack.

I didn’t realize with a magazine the butt was so heavy it caused the pistol to overcome the muzzle counterweight.

As I looked for the spare round I watched in slow motion horror as the rear of the pistol sank in its rack rotating the barrel back toward the safe door and me.

I should have ran screaming like a girl but I stupidly tried catching it, feeling it fumble through my hands as it now fell through space - lucky one of my fingers didn’t end up in the trigger guard.

After passing through my hands like a greased pig it stabilized - blackstrap square to edge of steel safe door jamb.

It hit hard enough to mark the cerakote but did not go bang.

It was enough drop test for me. I’m sure that one has good sear interface and the trigger is light enough not to overcome its springs.

If I want an absolutely safe pistol I will carry a 1911 with its three different safeties.

How any striker fire gets called safer than a 1911 escapes me.

It all depends on user in most cases.

to be fair, isnt glock the only striker pistol that is "half cocked"? all the others are fully cocked and on the sear and that does both me a bit.
 
to be fair, isnt glock the only striker pistol that is "half cocked"? all the others are fully cocked and on the sear and that does both me a bit.
The CZ p10 series, the M&P, and all the other Glock 'clones' are only partially cocked, but all with enough energy to ignite a primer if safeties were to fail. The AR-15 isn't truly safe either- if struck hard enough on the buttstock it could fire. I think it's H&K who improved the design of the 416/mr556 to not have that safety concern.