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I'd say go Shadow 2. Makes all polymer frame guns feel like rattle trap pieces of shit (okay maybe that's a little bit of hyperbole... but it's not a complete lie).
Also, the high bore axis on the SIG, relative to Glock, really did feel outdated to me... maybe it's the way I've been trained to grip a pistol, but it did feel top heavy. When I look at other brands of pistols (CZs being the exception), I see this high bore axis and it puts me off... but I'm just one guy on the internet with a bunch of opinions.![]()
I'm thinking about trying this for comp shooting this next year. I had a CZP10c and it was a great gun.
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That info is not tin hat, it comes DIRECTLY from the Glock instructors at at armours acadamyEL OH EL
More tinfoil hat stupidity
Forensic examiners can match a bullet fired from any gun if they have that gun in hand. Doesn't matter the kind of rifling the barrel has.
Even more LOL
Polygonal rifling makes it much more difficult. But not impossible.That info is not tin hat, it comes DIRECTLY from the Glock instructors at at armours acadamy
I mentioned in a post above that I did have malfunctions on Glocks and that more than 90% had to do with magazine springs.
Well, I found an old picture of the springs. Below are two springs both from a Gen 3 Model 27. The top spring was in one of two magazines that were shot regularly, and kept loaded, 24/7/365 for over 3 years. The bottom spring is a new replacement.
The malfunction was without exception a failure to feed on any of the last 3 or 4 rounds in the magazines. So, cycle your mags often, and inspect the springs often as well.
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Hey! Here is a nugget of truth.It matters a whole lot less than people think once you grip a pistol hard and learn how to manage (not eliminate) recoil.
The 320 does look like it should filp and flop more than other guns, but recoil management on it, as far as getting back on target quickly, is phenomenally easy. That said, these are 9mm pistols, not 454 Casull revolvers, so they don't have much recoil of note, and the average man should be strong enough to deal with what they throw at you.Wow, I'm late to this party, but gonna chime in in response to the OP anyway...
I have a Gen 3 and a Gen 5. My issued duty gun is a Gen 2, and the gun I usually qualify with is a Gen 4.
The grip texture on the Gens 4 and 5 is WAY better than the previous versions.
As for triggers, some say there is no difference, but I do notice a difference between the Gen 4 and Gen 5 trigger feel. I prefer the Gen 5. It's still "mushy" like a Glock, but somehow it's also more tactile/crisp/positive/whatever... at least in my experience--especially on reset.
Using the same sights (Trijicon Bright n' Tough) on my 19 (Gen 5) as on my 17 (Gen 3) I can shoot tighter groups with the stubbier Gen 5... take that for whatever its worth. I did get to compare my Gen 5 19 against one of the Gen 4 17s at work (standard Glock steel sights). Still shot better with the Gen 5 19 (knocked down 8" plates faster and with fewer misses--could have been the due to the sights). Again, anecdotal, so take it with a grain of salt.
In my opinion, if you're buying a model you don't already have, get the Gen 5, if available. If you already have a Gen 3 or 4 of a particular model, only update if you have cash burning holes in your pockets.
I don't have a lot of experience with various brands of pistols, but I can say this. Shot my FIL's SIG 229 (or whatever the SEALs used to carry... 226?), and the trigger was a huge disappointment. Now, to be fair, his pistol is California'd, so it may be some kind of compliance thing, but there was literally NO reset on the trigger. When you let off looking for a reset, you just get a limp trigger (no spring force "assisting" your trigger finger back). Once you let ALL the way off the trigger, it kinda "falls" into place and you can shoot again... I really didn't know what to think... I was really disappointed. Also, the high bore axis on the SIG, relative to Glock, really did feel outdated to me... maybe it's the way I've been trained to grip a pistol, but it did feel top heavy. When I look at other brands of pistols (CZs being the exception), I see this high bore axis and it puts me off... but I'm just one guy on the internet with a bunch of opinions.![]()
This high bore axis thing is BS. It matters a whole lot less than people think once you grip a pistol hard and learn how to manage (not eliminate) recoil.
BTW, the bore axis on any CZ (except the P-10 series) is quite a bit higher than glocks. CZs just hide it behind an illusion.
The 320 does look like it should filp and flop more than other guns, but recoil management on it, as far as getting back on target quickly, is phenomenally easy. That said, these are 9mm pistols, not 454 Casull revolvers, so they don't have much recoil of note, and the average man should be strong enough to deal with what they throw at you.
Interesting.I once had to function test 4500 rounds of 115 gr FMJ through something like 25 different handguns. I got it done in a day plus the next morning, but by the end of it my hand was wore out enough that I could feel everything "wrong" with each of the handguns (mold seams, safeties that hit my thumb, anything that rubbed/moved under recoil, etc..).
What I noticed was the P226 and P228 put noticeably more strain on the tendons in my ring and pinky finger than everything else. Obviously people aren't often shooting 3000 rounds in a day so it's not like it's a huge deal but the higher bore axis does have an effect. That all said, I think MOST people are probably spending dramatically more time finding sight picture than what little benefits you'll get from lower bore axis on the pistol's recoil.
I mentioned in a post above that I did have malfunctions on Glocks and that more than 90% had to do with magazine springs.
Well, I found an old picture of the springs. Below are two springs both from a Gen 3 Model 27. The top spring was in one of two magazines that were shot regularly, and kept loaded, 24/7/365 for over 3 years. The bottom spring is a new replacement.
The malfunction was without exception a failure to feed on any of the last 3 or 4 rounds in the magazines. So, cycle your mags often, and inspect the springs often as well.
![]()
Steel magazine springs don't "take a set" from static loading. They instead lose preload from repeating cycling; i.e. loading and unloading.
Regardless of the cause, it's something that needs to be monitored for wear and replaced as necessary.
Required posting when mentioning Glocks.
This
In case anyone wants to argue with this guy on springs..............just know he's an automotive suspension expert. You will lose that argument.
E Bryant, Is it the same with a bow (like bow and arrow)? I'd always heard it takes a set after you cut it, and leave it stringed. Is it actually going through some number of shooting cycles that gets it to take initial set? V springs the same? It seems like once I've heated and tempered them, then put them in the vise for full compression 1x to verify temper, that they take a set. Or am I confusing 2 events: first compression "set" with a later "loss of pre-load"?
Oh, and I like Glocks, S&W M&P, SIG X5's, and all sort of CZ's. Gen5 over Gen4.
Anyone ever measured the actual metal creep under constant load of a spring?
Steel magazine springs don't "take a set" from static loading. They instead lose preload from repeating cycling; i.e. loading and unloading.
Regardless of the cause, it's something that needs to be monitored for wear and replaced as necessary.
My original post is obviously anecdotal. But there is more to the story. First, I said I shot the gun regularly with the offending magazines. That meant like once a month, sometimes every two months. At that time I was shooting my 1911's a lot. In the meantime they were always loaded, and with the Plus one bases. I'm by no means a spring scientist. But here's the rest of the story:I've heard this dozens of times over the years, but have some experience that makes me question it:
Many of us used to have a problem at work when turning in our handguns and magazines to the armory. When clearing the pistol, some rounds would just fall out of the magazine because the spring failed to push the follower/next round up against the feed lip. It instead just sat there until we shook it loose and it then moved the follower.
After making the armorers aware, we have not had that issue in a few years now, so I think they may have started some kind of rotation or something. But I have seen several times in life magazines whose spring is perpetually compressed just spill out rounds.
I always felt the same way about Glocks coming off of 1911s... even the M9.Bought a Gen 5, first Glock, to see what all the hoopla was about. I don't like not having a thumb safety, too dangerous for me personally without one, and full disclosure, never shot the pistol yet, actually have about 7 guns Ive bought this year I haven't shot yet, and the Glock doesn't impress me when I just hold it and dry fire in my apartment. Feels Clunky to me.![]()
Absolute 100% falsehood.. The magic of ‘metallurgical science’ is commonplace in the world of forensics these days, dude. It’s called ‘striation’. Not only will they zero a bullet right down to the exact barrel/rifling on any/every single gen 5 barrel on the planet, they’ll prove it beyond the shadow of a doubt. Lord have mercyI will never have a Gen 5 Glock. I own several BUT the gen 5 has a Marksman barrel. It originally was called a Marking barrel. Gen 5's can have ballistics traced to a certain barrel. 4 and earlier tell you it was shot from a Glock, not which one. If you ever were in a gun fight there is no way of telling which Glock the bullet came from. And guaranteed even if you shot a bank robber/killer you would be sued by someone.
See I'm the opposite. I will never own, let alone carry, a pistol that needs to have a safety manipulated to make it fire.I don't like not having a thumb safety
Handguns without manual safeties are not dangerous. They don't go off by themselves. Incompetent users are the danger.too dangerous for me personally without one
But there's definitely a reason why all the .mil guys switched to Glocks in recent years.
100% agreeSee I'm the opposite. I will never own, let alone carry, a pistol that needs to have a safety manipulated to make it fire.
Handguns without manual safeties are not dangerous. They don't go off by themselves. Incompetent users are the danger.
Can I get an “AMEN”!See I'm the opposite. I will never own, let alone carry, a pistol that needs to have a safety manipulated to make it fire.
Handguns without manual safeties are not dangerous. They don't go off by themselves. Incompetent users are the danger.
Or it could be a personal opinion based on someone’s experience.A strong opinion for or against a thumb safety is almost always a lack of practice.
Or it could be a personal opinion based on someone’s experience.
Possibly, but it’s far more likely to be based on someone’s lack of experience.Or it could be a personal opinion based on someone’s experience.
A strong opinion for or against a thumb safety is almost always a lack of practice.
Anyone who requires a manual safely to be safe with a firearm, needs to meet up “oh don’t worry, it’s unloaded” crew and take their guns to the local Sheriff’s dept and turn them in, for everyone’s safety.What if Glock made a bolt-action rifle, an AR15, or a shotgun, all with no thumb safety, hmmmmmm…
Ah, but the safety is the high trigger pull my friend (but you knew that).I agree, all I use on a regular basis is glocks, and sometimes a super Blackhawk 44 mag, also without a manual safety.![]()
Sorry... I shouldn't have said "all the .mil guys."Who told you that?
The standard issue handguns are the M17 and/or M18. Neither of which is a Glock.
Of course, you and I are totally safe. World-class safe, I reckon.Anyone who requires a manual safely to be safe with a firearm, needs to meet up “oh don’t worry, it’s unloaded” crew and take their guns to the local Sheriff’s dept and turn them in, for everyone’s safety.
Christ there are a good amount of people who can’t remember the fan/light switch in the freakin bathroom….
I never mentioned grip safeties, drop safeties, non-hair triggers, or loaded chamber indicators. The reason is self evident in my post.Just think: if everyone, including you and I, was so perfectly safe, so perfectly competent, and so incredibly lucky to never stumble, be surprised, or get tired, well, then we wouldn’t need manual safeties, heavy triggers, grip safeties, drop safeties, loaded chamber indicators, OR trigger safeties on any gun.