What is the best?
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Re: What is the best?
It really boils down to what is the intended application for the firearm and what are you willing to spend. Is it for a weekend plinker? Is it for a lady with small hands to use for self defense? is it for a 300lb body builder to use as a night stand gun? is it for concealed carry? and so on. As for the price aspect if you have a few million dollars laying around to blow I am certain I can find a manufacturer who will design a firearm for you from the ground up. In essence there is not enough information to properly answer the question without reverting to being a fanboy, and with that in mind I would like to mention the FNP-40 since my other favorites have already been mentioned.
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Re: What is the best?
I love my SIG P229 SCT in .40
Glock .40's have be know to blow up
I'd be willing to bet a STI double stack 2011 in ,.40 is the best shooting .40 out there (it's the best shooting .40 I've ever shot)
Glock .40's have be know to blow up
I'd be willing to bet a STI double stack 2011 in ,.40 is the best shooting .40 out there (it's the best shooting .40 I've ever shot)
"Speed is fine accuracy is final."
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"Great danger lies in the notion we can reason with evil."
-Winston Churchill
And the wind shall say 'Here were decent godless people'. Their only monument the asphalt road and a thousand lost golf balls.
-T.S Elliot
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-Winston Churchill
And the wind shall say 'Here were decent godless people'. Their only monument the asphalt road and a thousand lost golf balls.
-T.S Elliot
Re: What is the best?
The only problem I can find with Sigs, I can't afford to buy every one I see. I have a S&W 410S that works fine. Trigger is a little hard though and it takes 3 hands to field strip it.
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Re: What is the best?
Oh, oh, I better run both of mine by my friends at EOD.Zoomie wrote:I love my SIG P229 SCT in .40
Glock .40's have be know to blow up
I'd be willing to bet a STI double stack 2011 in ,.40 is the best shooting .40 out there (it's the best shooting .40 I've ever shot)
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Re: What is the best?
Other guns have blown up, too.Zoomie wrote:I love my SIG P229 SCT in .40
Glock .40's have be know to blow up....
Byron Dickens
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Re: What is the best?
Agreed. That really is about as helpful as "all Taurus are junk" or any other statement. Each gun is different. Certainly years of use by hundreds of thousands of users can start to form a reputation about reliability etc. But blanket statements based on a few events are just blanket statements. If you'll notice from some of my posts, I don't like Kahr because of an issue I had with them personally and other rumors/reputation I've heard since. But I always couch this statement by saying everyone should do their own research and my problems only relate to my gun. Hundreds of thousands of users like their Kahrs just fine and trust their lives to them.bdickens wrote:Other guns have blown up, too.Zoomie wrote:I love my SIG P229 SCT in .40
Glock .40's have be know to blow up....
That said, I've owned a .40-cal Glock for 12-plus years. I don't have a clue about round count, but I'd guesstimate it at over 5,000 for sure. I've never had a single problem with that gun other than ejection issues with crappy aluminum-case Blazer ammo.
Of course, I don't shoot reloads either. As most "experts" have explained to me, the .40 S&W is a very high pressure round to begin with. And the Glock (and some others) have relatively "loose" chambers which allow the shell to swell a bit when fired. Reloading used brass from a .40 Glock is OK, but one has to be more careful and not use this brass umpteen times. I'm not a reloader, but this has been told to me by countless reloaders, armorers, etc.
In a nutshell, any .40-cal gun can go KABOOM if you continue to feed it reloaded cartridges that have been reloaded multiple times already. Glocks may be a bit more prone to this because their looser chambers (which greatly improve reliability at a slight sacrifice of tac-driving accuracy). Same thing would/will probably happen with .357 Sig cartridges, but so many fewer people shoot that cartridge that you don't hear about it as "fact" amongst the grapevine.
But again this is just what I'm told by people who know and understand a lot more about such things than I ever will. I feed my Glocks factory brass ammo and don't worry about it one bit.
Re: What is the best?
Perhaps you should research this statement a bit more. Glock 40s have an unsupported chamber as they were built from a 9mm.austinrealtor wrote:Agreed. That really is about as helpful as "all Taurus are junk" or any other statement. Each gun is different. Certainly years of use by hundreds of thousands of users can start to form a reputation about reliability etc. But blanket statements based on a few events are just blanket statements. If you'll notice from some of my posts, I don't like Kahr because of an issue I had with them personally and other rumors/reputation I've heard since. But I always couch this statement by saying everyone should do their own research and my problems only relate to my gun. Hundreds of thousands of users like their Kahrs just fine and trust their lives to them.bdickens wrote:Other guns have blown up, too.Zoomie wrote:I love my SIG P229 SCT in .40
Glock .40's have be know to blow up....
That said, I've owned a .40-cal Glock for 12-plus years. I don't have a clue about round count, but I'd guesstimate it at over 5,000 for sure. I've never had a single problem with that gun other than ejection issues with crappy aluminum-case Blazer ammo.
Of course, I don't shoot reloads either. As most "experts" have explained to me, the .40 S&W is a very high pressure round to begin with. And the Glock (and some others) have relatively "loose" chambers which allow the shell to swell a bit when fired. Reloading used brass from a .40 Glock is OK, but one has to be more careful and not use this brass umpteen times. I'm not a reloader, but this has been told to me by countless reloaders, armorers, etc.
In a nutshell, any .40-cal gun can go KABOOM if you continue to feed it reloaded cartridges that have been reloaded multiple times already. Glocks may be a bit more prone to this because their looser chambers (which greatly improve reliability at a slight sacrifice of tac-driving accuracy). Same thing would/will probably happen with .357 Sig cartridges, but so many fewer people shoot that cartridge that you don't hear about it as "fact" amongst the grapevine.
But again this is just what I'm told by people who know and understand a lot more about such things than I ever will. I feed my Glocks factory brass ammo and don't worry about it one bit.
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Re: What is the best?
This comment intrigued me. I'm fairly new to handguns, having been a rifle and shotgun man most of my life. I've shot my friend Brian's Glock 19 and now my Sig P226. I didn't notice much difference between the two, either in my accuracy on target or the feel of the gun while shooting. The DA trigger is different, but the SA trigger felt quite similar.austinrealtor wrote:I personally own Glock .40s and trust them with my life daily (as do most FBI agents and a large number of state and local law enforcement agencies). Over 10-12 years I have "trained" myself to shoot them accurately, but must admit that shooting a Glock well could train your hands to not shoot other guns well (as I recently found out while trying to shoot a Sig P225).
What sort of problem did you have with the P225? Trouble with your groupings? I think any gun is going to take practice to start shooting accurately. Last week I shot 80 rounds through my Sig into six targets. The last target had the best grouping of all, which tells me that I was beginning to understand how the gun worked and how to hit center mass with it. (I plan on gaining more understanding this weekend. ) I suspect you'd do fine with the Sig once you've put a few hundred rounds through it. Or maybe I'm wrong?
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Re: What is the best?
I am not a good shooter so I can only give you information based on my research.
Glock 23 and Sig 229 are by far the most popular and most proven system and have the longest history. All these are extremely important.
HK is probably next in the line in terms of reliability and quality. XD40 is a new comer and has generated a lot of buzz over the last few years, but has yet to become as prestige as Glock and Sig.
I personally hate HK's trigger system but love both Glock and Sig, but that's a personal opinion.
Glock 23 and Sig 229 are by far the most popular and most proven system and have the longest history. All these are extremely important.
HK is probably next in the line in terms of reliability and quality. XD40 is a new comer and has generated a lot of buzz over the last few years, but has yet to become as prestige as Glock and Sig.
I personally hate HK's trigger system but love both Glock and Sig, but that's a personal opinion.
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Re: What is the best?
You're on the right track with your thought process regarding this. I was grouping fine after a few mags of shooting with P225. Was hitting down and left like I do with any new gun that has a stiffer trigger than my Glocks with 4.5-pound trigger pull. And for a while I was purposely shooting full DA pull, decocking, full DA pull again to train myself on the DA pull (first shot being most important). But even the SA pull was throwing me off a bit (lot of slack in that trigger - and this is coming from a Glock guy ). The grip angle is a bit different, not drastically so, but enough that I noticed. Also had trouble finding a good position for my off hand because the way I normally hold it with my Glocks was causing the tip of my trigger finger to rub the top of my off-hand top knuckle because the trigger guard is thinner. Finally ended up gripping it like a DA revolver and that seemed to work better for me.baldeagle wrote:This comment intrigued me. I'm fairly new to handguns, having been a rifle and shotgun man most of my life. I've shot my friend Brian's Glock 19 and now my Sig P226. I didn't notice much difference between the two, either in my accuracy on target or the feel of the gun while shooting. The DA trigger is different, but the SA trigger felt quite similar.austinrealtor wrote:I personally own Glock .40s and trust them with my life daily (as do most FBI agents and a large number of state and local law enforcement agencies). Over 10-12 years I have "trained" myself to shoot them accurately, but must admit that shooting a Glock well could train your hands to not shoot other guns well (as I recently found out while trying to shoot a Sig P225).
What sort of problem did you have with the P225? Trouble with your groupings? I think any gun is going to take practice to start shooting accurately. Last week I shot 80 rounds through my Sig into six targets. The last target had the best grouping of all, which tells me that I was beginning to understand how the gun worked and how to hit center mass with it. (I plan on gaining more understanding this weekend. ) I suspect you'd do fine with the Sig once you've put a few hundred rounds through it. Or maybe I'm wrong?
Anyway, all of the above took time and practice to work out the kinks on a few range sessions. What I then realized is that when I switched back to my Glocks, my mechanics were off on those and I was not shooting them as well as I normally do (at 7 yards with any of my Glocks I can usually make one rough hole with a few flyers - I was spreading the bullets around about a 4-inch circle).
So rather than ruin the years of practice and refinement I have with my Glocks (I'm by no means a great shooter, but I'm confident in my abilities if ever needed) I dumped the Sig. My real reason for picking it up (cheap - about $400) was as a student loaner when I start teaching CHL classes. But after letting a few female friends/relatives with small hands try to shoot it (they HATED it and much prefered my Glocks), I decided it wasn't the best choice. Have since picked up a Beretta 85, but not really liking it either so may be selling it soon.
Anyway, as I said originally, none of this is a knock against Sigs. For some reason I just have more trouble shooting them well. I do a little better for some reason with a P239 the two times I've fired one. Don't like the P226/P229 because grips are too fat for my hands (and now that I'm thinking about it, even though the P225 felt great in my shooting hand, the off-hand placement problems sort of indicate it was "too thin" in some respects). I also seem to shoot better with H&K's than Sigs for some reason I can't understand. I shoot better with 1911 pattern guns than Glocks, but that could just be a combination of better inherent mechanical accuracy plus the last few I've shot have been $1,500 custom Kimbers and such (shooting friends' guns is FUN )
Anyway familiarity is important with firearms, which is why I keep sticking with Glocks and Glock-style guns (Walther PPS) and S&W revolvers ... because I've shot both for a long time and everything else just seems strange in some way. The revolvers I shoot well enough because I've trained myself to do so. They're vastly different than Glocks as well, but my brain sort of kicks into "revolver" mode when my hand touches one. I grip a revolver differently than I grip a Glock, squeeze the trigger differently etc. I guess there just ain't room left in my little brain for a third type of handgun shooting (DA/SA semi-autos).
I was reading something the other day (don't remember who/what/where) about Glocks and some trainer-type person was quoted saying that Glocks are great if you stick to shooting Glocks. But they are very much their own animal and don't translate easily into shooting other guns well (especially classic DA/SA type semi-autos).
Re: What is the best?
Let me attempt to clarify.
There have been an unusual number of Glocks chambered in .40 S&W that have had catastrophic failures likely due to their chamber being less than fully supported combined with what are most likely hot loads in the already high pressure .40 S&W round.
All Taurus' may not be junk, but there are a lot more junk Taurus' than there are junk SIG's, Glocks, Springfield's, ect. (and no its not because they produce more guns). Same goes for Glocks chambered in .40, they are not designed to handle higher pressure rounds as well as SIGs or H&K's are, your Glock in .40 may never fail, but the fact remains that it is a problem, and one that should be taken into consideration.
There have been an unusual number of Glocks chambered in .40 S&W that have had catastrophic failures likely due to their chamber being less than fully supported combined with what are most likely hot loads in the already high pressure .40 S&W round.
All Taurus' may not be junk, but there are a lot more junk Taurus' than there are junk SIG's, Glocks, Springfield's, ect. (and no its not because they produce more guns). Same goes for Glocks chambered in .40, they are not designed to handle higher pressure rounds as well as SIGs or H&K's are, your Glock in .40 may never fail, but the fact remains that it is a problem, and one that should be taken into consideration.
"Speed is fine accuracy is final."
-Wyatt Earp
"Great danger lies in the notion we can reason with evil."
-Winston Churchill
And the wind shall say 'Here were decent godless people'. Their only monument the asphalt road and a thousand lost golf balls.
-T.S Elliot
-Wyatt Earp
"Great danger lies in the notion we can reason with evil."
-Winston Churchill
And the wind shall say 'Here were decent godless people'. Their only monument the asphalt road and a thousand lost golf balls.
-T.S Elliot
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Re: What is the best?
Actually it is unsupported AND looser (at least that's what the Glock armorers I talk to tell me - I'm not an armorer, so passing on my knowledge third hand). The unsupported issue is the lack of full support of the case head. The "looser" is just like it sounds - looser tolerances inside the chamber itself. Again, this is how it's been explained to me ... I'm neither an armorer nor a reloader. I just shoot factory brass .40 in my Glocks and have zero problems.CompVest wrote:Perhaps you should research this statement a bit more. Glock 40s have an unsupported chamber as they were built from a 9mm.austinrealtor wrote:In a nutshell, any .40-cal gun can go KABOOM if you continue to feed it reloaded cartridges that have been reloaded multiple times already. Glocks may be a bit more prone to this because their looser chambers (which greatly improve reliability at a slight sacrifice of tac-driving accuracy). Same thing would/will probably happen with .357 Sig cartridges, but so many fewer people shoot that cartridge that you don't hear about it as "fact" amongst the grapevine.
But again this is just what I'm told by people who know and understand a lot more about such things than I ever will. I feed my Glocks factory brass ammo and don't worry about it one bit.
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Re: What is the best?
Care to elaborate on this or support it in any way? Are you meaning simply that Sigs and H&Ks have fully supported chambers? If so, where is it written in stone that this is the only design that can handle .40-cal pressures? And if this is so, then why has Glock not been sued? Why do so many police agencies continue to use their products (just because they're cheaper?)Zoomie wrote:Same goes for Glocks chambered in .40, they are not designed to handle higher pressure rounds as well as SIGs or H&K's are
Anyway, before this gets into some stupid fanboy shouting match, I am seriously interested to know FACTS about these Glock .40 KABOOM issues. I own two .40 Glocks. I researched these issues before I purchased, talked to a bunch of people, and felt perfectly safe buying and using these guns as long as I avoided overpressured reloads. Since I don't reload anyway, no big deal to me personally.
I honestly don't know whether you're right or wrong. I'm not a gun engineer. But I buy my guns based on reputation and Glocks have a stellar reputation, as do Sigs. H&Ks have a great reputation too, but this would make me second guess them if I lived in Arizona or worked in Iraq or some other sandbox ... (scroll a bit more than halfway down the page and see a Glock and H&K both buried in sand - Glock is removed and fires all 13 rounds from magazine; H&K won't fire a single round and has to be disassembled and cleaned before it will do so) http://www.theprepared.com/index.php?op ... id=90&Item" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Re: What is the best?
I'm not saying glocks are unreliable, and I am not a SIG fanboy, I don't like to shoot Glocks, but I understand that they are extremely reliable, and very well designed, but the undisputed fact remains that Glocks have a lower factor of safety than do sigs, especially in .40 caliber. As a Mechanical Engineering student, I see this as a design flaw (in a glock, impossible I know). Just because most car's in Toyota's affected lines won't fail doesn't mean there wasn't a design flaw. Also bringing in other aspects of Glock's admittedly stellar record does not add anything to your apparent assertion that a problem with .40 Glocks going KaBoom does not exist.
Also I would like to note that after further study I found that some H&K variants do have fully supported chambers and have experienced similar problems.
For your reading pleasure. http://www.thegunzone.com/glock/glock-kb-faq.html
Also I would like to note that after further study I found that some H&K variants do have fully supported chambers and have experienced similar problems.
For your reading pleasure. http://www.thegunzone.com/glock/glock-kb-faq.html
"Speed is fine accuracy is final."
-Wyatt Earp
"Great danger lies in the notion we can reason with evil."
-Winston Churchill
And the wind shall say 'Here were decent godless people'. Their only monument the asphalt road and a thousand lost golf balls.
-T.S Elliot
-Wyatt Earp
"Great danger lies in the notion we can reason with evil."
-Winston Churchill
And the wind shall say 'Here were decent godless people'. Their only monument the asphalt road and a thousand lost golf balls.
-T.S Elliot