I'm all for a debate, but no one has any valid facts/arguments to counter with. How a pistol "feels" has nothing to do with marksmanship,which means it has nothing to do with selecting a pistol. Next...
I'm all for a debate, but no one has any valid facts/arguments to counter with. How a pistol "feels" has nothing to do with marksmanship,which means it has nothing to do with selecting a pistol. Next...
Tdc
This is, if you will allow me, a stupid statement TDC and you know better or should. Get off your high horse for a minute and rejoin the real world.
If a shooter decides he/she wants a pistol or revolver that "feels" good in their hands then it has
everything , to do with that shooters choice of a handgun. It maybe the only reason why he buys the gun he buys. It may even impact on how well the shooter shoots the gun. Who is to know? You?
The fact the shooter may shoot just as well with another gun, a Glock for instance, matters not. I have several handguns all of which I shoot about as good as my physical abilities will allow. All were bought either for intended purpose, because I fell for the advertising, some out of curiosity and all because the felt good in my hands. Why buy something that is uncomfortable to shoot. I don't own a Glock, a 500 S&W or a 460 Revolver. Why? Because they were uncomfortable to shoot. One was downright hurtful due to recoil. The Glock you are so fond of always naturally pointed high in my hands along with being uncomfortable to hold due to the rather large hump at the lower portion of the grip Glock seems to think we all need to put up with. Is tipping your wrist down to bring the gun horizontal one of your fundamentals? If it is then it is something I don't have to do with my other handguns.
I know you like and shoot Glocks so in some ways I feel your statements are almost a reflection upon what you shoot as in "if you can shoot a Glock you can shoot any gun" a comment I find amusing in the extreme. Is the Glock really that hard to learn to shoot? I know you have to tip the barrel down due to it's needless desire to aim skyward in most hands but...
Most here can drive a car. Once you learn the fundamentals on how to drive a car, you can drive
most cars. That said, we all don't drive the same car. Some of us like sporty cars, others prefer sedans and god bless those who like Dodge Caravans. God knows Chrysler has sold millions of them. One of the many reasons we buy what we buy is because we feel comfortable driving the car we choose. Deal with it. So to guns.
Take care
Bob
ps BTW this is a counter to your statement so you can no longer post the open ended statement "that nobody can..."I just did!