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I have not met anyone yet that cannot shoot a Glock 19. They are reliable, not heavy, easy to shoot, and accurate within reasons.
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I hear ya, and I believe that it's a learning process on them. My 19 has a Ghost trigger group, and it does not have the horrible factory trigger, the best $100 spent on a Glock. I remember when I made the transition from my 1911s to a Glock, and it was horrible. But, I was used to shooting my competition 1911s with a crisp 2 lbs trigger pull, and now I had this brick on my hand.I can't. Glocks do not fit my hand, triggers are mushy and overall they are unwieldly. Heck, last time I tried to dry fire one I thought the trigger was broken. Then, the friend of mine that owned it said keep pulling the trigger, after about a mile I heard a click.
And it is not because it is a striker fired gun, I have no issues with HK VP 9 or Caniks (Turkish Walther PPQ clones).
I hear ya, and I believe that it's a learning process on them. My 19 has a Ghost trigger group, and it does not have the horrible factory trigger, the best $100 spent on a Glock. I remember when I made the transition from my 1911s to a Glock, and it was horrible. But, I was used to shooting my competition 1911s with a crisp 2 lbs trigger pull, and now I had this brick on my hand.As you well know, it's all about conditioning, and learning to use the gun properly.
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How you dress for work and play has a lot to do with what you carry. My #1 carry is still a Ruger LCP in .380 - it always fits. I possible, I prefer an EC9s single stack in 9mm or an SP101 in .357. Rarely do I carry larger because it's hot in Texas and I'm fat. If I think I might be involved in more serious social work, I will carry a Glock 19 and dress accordingly.
I'm not a Kimber fan at all, it takes tuning to get them to run. I have had 3 Springfield, 1 was garbage, one was a TRP that ran well, the last was sent to a smith and had a lot of money and work put into it. It ran was not worth the expense.I sold both my 1911s. They had nice triggers but aside from that they were only good for practicing malfunction drills. Kimber and a Springfield.
The negatives of 1911s vastly outweigh the few positives. I'm not a glock fan boy, there are lots of good combat pistols out there but the modern 1911 isn't one of them.
I will now await my lashing from the 1911 crowd.
Cheers
I sold both my 1911s. They had nice triggers but aside from that they were only good for practicing malfunction drills. Kimber and a Springfield.
The negatives of 1911s vastly outweigh the few positives. I'm not a glock fan boy, there are lots of good combat pistols out there but the modern 1911 isn't one of them.
I will now await my lashing from the 1911 crowd.
Cheers
I shoot ~60K rounds in a competition year with my 2011s, NEVER had a malfunction, though I do maintain them and replace springs etc. on a regular basis.I sold both my 1911s. They had nice triggers but aside from that they were only good for practicing malfunction drills. Kimber and a Springfield.
The negatives of 1911s vastly outweigh the few positives. I'm not a glock fan boy, there are lots of good combat pistols out there but the modern 1911 isn't one of them.
I will now await my lashing from the 1911 crowd.