JALLEN wrote:x007x wrote:I started have the +1 the other day. I guess I just was not thinking about it that much..My gun is rarely ever not chambered.
JALLEN wrote:A P7M8 magazine has only 8 rounds to start with, and 9mm at that, so every round counts. Pop in the magazine, rack the slide, drop the magazine, add a round to it and reinsert.
It's a terrific little pistol, especially for lefties, but it does have some drawbacks.
Wow, I work at a gun store and I have not heard or seen that pistol in a long time.
Yeah, they're not sold anymore, I think. The P7M8 was hideously expensive ($~1500), 9 mm, only 8 rounds, plus one if you want, and it gets real hot real fast when fired continuously. OTOH, it is lefty friendly, has the squeeze cocker safety that many bad guys won't be able to figure out if they somehow get it away from you, (I hope!), relatively small and light, and wonderfully accurate to shoot, at least at closer ranges. It's no Bullseye pistol, though.
NJ state police used to issue it, but found that troopers had a proclivity for shooting themselves when drawing it because the act of gripping cocked the striker with no safety mechanism in place. That, combined with the revolver trained officers' habit of putting their fingers into the trigger guard early on the draw led to an unacceptable number of personal perforations (usually in the hindquarters) on the range.
The gun also makes a distinctive "clack" sound when the squeeze cocker is either activated or released. This is not a problem on the range, but it is one giveaway I wouldn't want to carry into dark places in search of bad guys.
The squeeze cocking mechanism also presents another dilemma: If you're holding a gun on someone (as police often have to do), do you keep a good grip on the weapon (in which case you're holding a cocked and unlocked gun pointed at the individual) or do you relax your grip to uncock it and make the gun more vulnerable to a takeaway?
IMHO, it was a cute idea but had too many drawbacks to be truly useful for defensive purposes. The market has spoken on it, and the issue wasn't just price.