UPDATE 3: Sig Sauer P238 Range Report
Posted: Sun Sep 26, 2010 2:48 pm
I’ve made two trips to the range with the new Sig P238. I really like this gun. I’m almost surprised by how well I like it.
Good:
Trigger – The trigger pull is amazing. Not stiff but solid and pretty short.
Recoil – MINIMAL! I’ve heard all the horror stories about .380s and the recoil presumably because the gun is so small. That is not the case with this Sig. The recoil is light and manageable.
Accuracy – I ripped out the X ring with 2 mags (12 shots) at 5 yds. At 8 yds, I could keep the shots in a 6 inch circle without trying real hard.
Size – Small, light, but not difficult to hold on to or get a proper grip on as long as you don’ t mind your pinkie kind of hanging.
Now for the bad…
The first trip to the range was reasonably disastrous. I loaded the magazine, loaded the gun, racked the slide and prepared for the first round downrange, pulled the trigger…click….nothing. That’s a wonderful feeling. I finally determined that I had not inserted the magazine completely. Lesson #1 – the bottom of the magazine is flush with the bottom of the gun. It’s not like slamming a magazine into my H&K.
However, the issues continued. It was difficult to get through a six rounds without some sort of problem. I was more than a bit concerned. And it wasn’t just me because williamkevin had issues and later so did my sister-in-law and niece. Failures to feed, failures to eject, one stovepipe and finally, the slide stop would become loose. <sigh> Every once in a while, a complete six rounds would work fine but very inconsistently.
When I was done with the range and milling about the firearms store, I talked to the manager about the slide stop, thinking that was probably the largest issue. He looked at it and saw that the spring that puts tension on that piece was popped out a bit. He reset that, but I was done shooting and went home.
Well, I couldn’t stand it…woke up this morning and decided I needed to go to the range and troubleshoot the issues one at a time. With the first four magazines, I had the same issues over and over, even the slide stop thing again. Broke into a new box of ammo and an amazing thing started happening…the problems completely stopped and the gun worked flawlessly for the next 9 magazines of ammo.
So, right now it would seem that the ammunition was the problem. I started off with a box of Remington. We had had problems with Remington before with one of our other guns. The lip on the Remington seems to stick up more than some of the other ammo. I guess the Sig didn’t like it and that lip was keeping the ammo from feeding properly. Or at least, this is all we can assume at this time. Once we shifted to the American Eagle ammunition that we bought at the range, the problems vanished, including the slide stop issue. Weird, right?
Bottom line….I adore the gun. The good things about the gun make continued troubleshooting and problem solving worth the time for me. So, I’ll keep working with it. Any feedback is, of course, welcome!
T.
Good:
Trigger – The trigger pull is amazing. Not stiff but solid and pretty short.
Recoil – MINIMAL! I’ve heard all the horror stories about .380s and the recoil presumably because the gun is so small. That is not the case with this Sig. The recoil is light and manageable.
Accuracy – I ripped out the X ring with 2 mags (12 shots) at 5 yds. At 8 yds, I could keep the shots in a 6 inch circle without trying real hard.
Size – Small, light, but not difficult to hold on to or get a proper grip on as long as you don’ t mind your pinkie kind of hanging.
Now for the bad…
The first trip to the range was reasonably disastrous. I loaded the magazine, loaded the gun, racked the slide and prepared for the first round downrange, pulled the trigger…click….nothing. That’s a wonderful feeling. I finally determined that I had not inserted the magazine completely. Lesson #1 – the bottom of the magazine is flush with the bottom of the gun. It’s not like slamming a magazine into my H&K.
However, the issues continued. It was difficult to get through a six rounds without some sort of problem. I was more than a bit concerned. And it wasn’t just me because williamkevin had issues and later so did my sister-in-law and niece. Failures to feed, failures to eject, one stovepipe and finally, the slide stop would become loose. <sigh> Every once in a while, a complete six rounds would work fine but very inconsistently.
When I was done with the range and milling about the firearms store, I talked to the manager about the slide stop, thinking that was probably the largest issue. He looked at it and saw that the spring that puts tension on that piece was popped out a bit. He reset that, but I was done shooting and went home.
Well, I couldn’t stand it…woke up this morning and decided I needed to go to the range and troubleshoot the issues one at a time. With the first four magazines, I had the same issues over and over, even the slide stop thing again. Broke into a new box of ammo and an amazing thing started happening…the problems completely stopped and the gun worked flawlessly for the next 9 magazines of ammo.
So, right now it would seem that the ammunition was the problem. I started off with a box of Remington. We had had problems with Remington before with one of our other guns. The lip on the Remington seems to stick up more than some of the other ammo. I guess the Sig didn’t like it and that lip was keeping the ammo from feeding properly. Or at least, this is all we can assume at this time. Once we shifted to the American Eagle ammunition that we bought at the range, the problems vanished, including the slide stop issue. Weird, right?
Bottom line….I adore the gun. The good things about the gun make continued troubleshooting and problem solving worth the time for me. So, I’ll keep working with it. Any feedback is, of course, welcome!
T.