And the cursing after failing to disengage the safety line is based upon personal experience also.

Moderator: carlson1
All joking aside, I will own a Glock one day.SQLGeek wrote:Don't get me wrong, I really like the 1911 (Thank you JMB and may God rest your soul) Platform, but as a new Glock owner, I felt it was my duty to lampoon a little bit.
And the cursing after failing to disengage the safety line is based upon personal experience also.
Not necessarily. Either will get the job done.SQLGeek wrote:In other words, 1911s for show and Glocks for a pro?
It's got a hernia.apostate wrote:http://www.thegunzone.com/glock/glock19.html
Dat right dere was funny - I dont care who ya are ....SQLGeek wrote:Once you have that 1911 (Thank you JMB and may God rest your soul), here's your manual of arms:
-Place lint free velvet cloth on shooting bench
-Don lint free, white gloves
-Remove 1911 (Thank you JMB and may God rest your soul) from wood and gold inlaid case lined in velvet
-Lock open the slide of your 1911 (Thank you JMB and may God rest your soul), visually inspect to see that it is unloaded and then whisper lovingly into the ejection port
-Place 1911 (Thank you JMB and may God rest your soul) on velvet cloth, under NO circumstances should it touch the shooting bench itself
-Gaze at 1911 (Thank you JMB and may God rest your soul) lovingly for several seconds, no more than 5 because you don't want to be too prideful
-Remove one $75 magazine from it's own velvet cloth and load with all seven (or maybe eight or nine of you're lucky) rounds of DEADLY MANSTOPPER .45 ACP ammo
-Delicately lift 1911 (Thank you JMB and may God rest your soul) from cloth, insert magazine and drop the slide. Ensure hammer is locked back.
-Point 1911 (Thank you JMB and may God rest your soul) down range and squeeze trigger.
-Curse when you realize you've forgotten to disengage the safety then apologize profusely to your 1911 (Thank you JMB and may God rest your soul) for using foul language in it's presence
-Squeeze trigger again and continue firing at target until magazine is empty
-Remove magazine and place on velvet cloth
-Verify your 1911 (Thank you JMB and may God rest your soul) is empty
-Whisper praise and thanks into the ejection port
-Repack 1911 (Thank you JMB and may God rest your soul) and your $15,000 worth of accessories.
-Head straight home, do not stop off to eat, fuel up or get a Slurpee.
-Once home, put on "Unchained Melody" on repeat on the HiFi
-Dim the lights appropriately
-Meticulously clean your 1911 (Thank you JMB and may God rest your soul) while singing softly to it
-Trade in your 1911 (Thank you JMB and may God rest your soul) and buy three Glocks
But did it still run a full 15 magazines flawlessly after this incident? That is the real question!apostate wrote:http://www.thegunzone.com/glock/glock19.html
I carried (in SuperTuck horsehide) a Colt Combat Commander for a bit...then gave it to my soldier-son (just too much cannon in my pants).USA1 wrote: All joking aside, I will own a Glock one day.
You know what they say...
A 1911 is what you show your friends.
A Glock is what you show your enemies.
Interesting ... methinks this is similar to my dislike of Kahr polymer-frame guns because of my own previous issues with one. I've since tried a few others - still don't like the gun overall well enough to own one (fits my hands wrong) but subsequent guns have tried from them have alleviated some of my apprehension at the brand in general.G.A. Heath wrote:The only times I have been hit with pieces of a gun were Glock .40S&W rigs that went Kaboom being shot by someone next to me. The first time happened to a shooter using reloads, with no injuries to any party. The second time the fellow was shooting factory +P ammo defensive in a gun that had less than 1000 rounds through it, and he required three stitches in his hand. Additionally don't attach a light to a pre-Gen4 glock chambered in .40S&W and expect a reliable firearm. I briefly owned a Gen4 Model 19 that got a replacement spring from Glock CS, still didn't cycle quite right and had some other "common issues" that Gen4s can have. So after 3 trips to an Glock armorer it seemed to be running right and I sold it with a clear conscious. The "Common issues" phrase are the armorer's words, not mine.
Regarding #1: it wasn't a major name brand round, it was something odd like bison bore or some such in a yellow and blue box. We shot a lot of it that day in a number of different .40 rigs (Glocks, XD/XDms, PX4 Storms, Smiths, ect).A-R wrote: Interesting ... methinks this is similar to my dislike of Kahr polymer-frame guns because of my own previous issues with one. I've since tried a few others - still don't like the gun overall well enough to own one (fits my hands wrong) but subsequent guns have tried from them have alleviated some of my apprehension at the brand in general.
As to the specifics above ..
1. Didn't realize anyone made factory +P .40 S&W ammo - never seen such a thing
2. The Glock .40 attached light problem is another I've never experienced in hundreds of rounds fired with a Streamlight TLR-1 attached to my old Glock 23 Gen 3 - just went bang every time like normal. But I think I've read this problem may have been worse on G22 versions (and more prominently complained about since more LEOs rely on Glock 22 + tac light combo for life-n-death scenarios.