Struck a nerve with the Glock fan club regarding their 35 year old pistol.
1) Slide-retaining clips = what passes fore slide rails in a Glock. Nothing to do with slide-locks.
2) I said nothing whatsoever claiming that plastic grip frames were not light or relatively strong.
3) Plastic grip frames with no sub-frame DO fracture in stress locations on occasion, creating a major and costly headache for civilian owners to replace. There are plenty of reports in gun forums, although the Glock fans live in denial about this.
4) Say what you will. Modular is the future. The 35 year old Glock pattern serialized plastic grip frame is becoming the past.
5) Glock and other all-plastic grip frame makers may now still dominate the market, but the 35-year-old design has been surpassed by the superior modular concept which will replace it.
Still Alive - see he had his good points.:>).
KIDDX it is no complement to be compared to TDC. Might be worth considering.
There is an ignore button on this board thankfully.
Take Care
Bob
Amongst our newly founded IDPA group, I do quite well with my S&W M66 snubby against the 'bottom feeder' plastic guns. Likely because I started shooting a revolver back in the days of "Combat Pistol Shooting" with my 4" M66. All you have to do is place your rds into an 8" diameter circle, usually at less than 15 yds. How tough is that?
"The rule of applied firepower - it is not the first rd fired or the number of rds that settles the matter. It is the first rd that finds the intended mark." Jeff Cooper
"Spray & pray" only works in the movies.
My wife shoots CZ Shadows and I occasionally use one of my 1911s to show the plastic guns what a REAL gun looks and sounds like.
FBI Miami shootout - Platt was hit by 9mm into the chest, lung had collapsed, would die from that wound alone. He however proceeded to fight against 8 armed agents, and killed 2 and wounded all others multiple times and was stopped only after 12 hits.
So all these rules and neat sayings, no matter who said it, are just that - neat sayings. Everything else is just various degrees of chance multiplied by various degrees of being in a wrong place at a wrong time.
So where was the swat sniper during that incident? A high powered rifle round to the melon would have worked eh?
My choice would be the Sig-Sauer P320 modular pistol.
Don't know if it's the "best" combat handgun, but I think that it is among the best.
It's among the contenders for the U.S. Army competition for a replacement sidearm, which must be a modular design.
The steel or aluminum sub-frame is the future.
Well the only ones that are Proven in combat.... the 1911, WW1 and WW2 and the Glock 21 , special forces. Everything else are wanabees.
I would have to say 1911. Its gone through 2 world wars and has proven it self over & over. Its gonna be 106 years and still going strong .!! Not to many hand guns can make that claim or will in our life time. Its been copied by every other country in way or another.
If I had a nickel for every time I heard my glock blowed up....... Followed by where can I buy a lower
FBI Miami shootout - Platt was hit by 9mm into the chest, lung had collapsed, would die from that wound alone. He however proceeded to fight against 8 armed agents, and killed 2 and wounded all others multiple times and was stopped only after 12 hits.
Glock 21???? WTF who uses that?
Look, here's the thing, and this is going to sound a bit harsh, but for the vast majority of shooters, and that includes most of the people on this forum, a bat with a nail in it would be about as useful as gun. Simply put, most people, including enthusiasts, can't shoot worth a sh!t. Very very few people could even manage to use their chosen gun in a way that would be effective in any kind of situation outside of plinking. There are those who shoots tens of thousands of rounds a year, in proper, dedicated practice, and it's those people, along with people who've used guns in combat or in the line of duty, whose opinions have merit and I would trust when it comes to picking a gun. Keyboard commandos who read a couple issues of Guns and Ammo a year and spout decades old information on "Stopping Power", well, their opinion goes into the same circular basket as the junk mail I get.
After donning my flame suit, given the vagueness of the question, I dare to say that the best combat pistol would be the FN FiveseveN. In its favour:
Lightweight
Extremely accurate
Ballistically effective out to 200m (with LEO ammo)
Defeats soft body armour (with LEO ammo)
Terminal ballistics is better than competition (hotly debated though. I have seen ballistic gel tests showing rifle-type yawing)
Recoil is far milder than the other main competition (9, 40, 45)
High ammo capacity - 20 in normal mags, 30 in mags that are extended but don't look crazy like a 33 round Glock mag
Ammo carrying capability is much higher than competition - a box of 50 rounds is half the size of a box of 9mm
ACCURATE!!!
The only downside is logistics. Finding ammo isn't as easy, but if I was heading into "Combat", the pistol is my secondary and I would be far more worried about refuelling my rifle. It wouldn't be my first choice in the apocalypse, but in every other situation, it wins.
If I had to take on hordes of marauding ground squirrels with an individual weapon, 5.7mm would be an excellent choice. For two-legged varmints, not so much.
https://pistol-forum.com/showthread.php?4338-Small-Caliber-PDW-s-FN-5-7-mm-HK-4-6-mm
5.7x28mm in a pistol is roughly equivalent to .22 Magnum in a rifle.
Until....your enemy is wearing body armor....then 5.7 x 28 & 4.6 x 30 make holes in them. 5.7 x 28 is not the greatest in stopping power...but get shot with one a few times and that changes everything.
Rich
Look into some ballistics gel tests. I would venture to say that the damage is better than virtually any 9, 40 or 45. I won't mention it by name, but a maniac with a FiveseveN killed plenty of people in a mass shooting years ago in the US. The 5.7x28 isn't nearly as good as a real rifle round, but far better than slow expanding normal pistol ammo. People have been shot with the 5.7x28 and
lived, that is certain. But many people survive being shot with pistols. That's why we bring rifles to gunfights.
But at the end of the day, the key in any fight is shot placement. Simply put, the FiveseveN is incredibly easy to shoot accurately, and quickly due to the ammo characteristics and low recoil. A 22lr is a perfectly good weapon in the hands of a fine pistol shooter. Shoot a FiveseveN and tell me an easier non-rimfire pistol there is to shoot. I have not found one better.
Competing against the "bottom feeder" polymer guns means nothing if the human using them can't shoot. The fact that no revolver shooter competes against those using autoloaders tells the tale. More rounds means you can shoot longer before reloading. It also means you can apply more rounds to a target/threat which is never a bad thing if you're in doubt of whether or not you hit your intended target. Like owlowl below points out, all those cliche sayings from ancient gun community folks are just sayings that have little and often zero credibility to back them up. I find it rather silly when you say you show the plastic guns what a "real gun looks and sounds like" by shooting your 1911. What makes it a "real" gun over any others and I can't recall a difference in muzzle report between any of the handgun calibres.



























