TX Rancher wrote:
Would a Glock be inherently safer if you didn’t have to pull the trigger to disassemble it…of course it would. But before I would ask the Glock design engineers to change it I would ask why it ended up that way. These are some pretty smart folks and you can bet somewhere along the line during development someone brought up the question of safety (at a minimum you can bet their legal team did). But the final decision was to leave it as designed.
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emphasis added]
When I started this thread I was going to ask a question of the members but then changed my mind because I wanted to see if anyone else would ask it; but no one really asked the exact question that was on my mind, though TX Rancher came close.
The question: What would have been the downside of providing a sear disconnect as on the S&W M&P pistols? The only answers that I can think of are: 1) It would have added a small bit of complexity to the pistol by adding parts and possibly adversely affecting reliability, and 2) It would have increased manufacturing costs (by what amount I don't know) and possibly affected their ability to command the lions share of LE sales by keeping costs at an absolute minimum, allowing GLOCK to underbid other high quality manufacturers.
The GLOCK is accurate, reliable in harsh conditions, durable, simple in design with a minimum of parts and it is affordable. But, it requires even greater attention to safety than many other designs. I don't own one. I considered the GLOCK because of the above fine attributes but I rejected it because of ergonomics--admittedly a highly subjective point. If it doesn't fit my hand, balance and point naturally, then I have to look elsewhere regardless of how many other fine points it might possess.
Anyone want to give me their thoughts on the question?