- Location
- West Quebec
Glock I would buy new or slightly used..
Have you gone around to the Wild West shop and rented a few of their guns to try?
There's no bad options on your list. But each one fits our hands differently then the others. And finding The One that folds naturally into your grip consistently and with good overall contact pressure all around the grip area is a big key element for success for both accuracy and speed. And only YOU can figure out which guns fits your hand correctly. And that means trying a lot of them. Then form your own short list and go try the ones of the short list again. And although I know that a visit to the Wild West range and renting their guns isn't cheap in the long run it will be money well spent if it points you to your perfect fitting gun.
I'd suggest that you add CZ to your list to at least try.
What you want to feel is a sense of even contact pressure all the way around the grip and along the full length of the back strap. If you have pockets of low contact pressure then you also end up with spots of higher pressure. And during recoil the gun can pivot on those points of higher pressure and slip where the contact pressure is low. by finding a gun and learning the proper grip that gives you a consistent even contact pressure all over the gun you'll find that it both stays in place better and also assumes a natural and consistent grip more naturally. All the stuff that you want if you want to shoot the gun well.
The other things about how the mechanical parts of the gun perform are all more or less equal. Like I said up higher you don't have any dogs on that short list. So it comes down to how the gun matches up to YOU. And all the interwebz babble about "buy this because I use it and love it" means diddly squat for you. You need to find your own fit. Otherwise it's like asking a guy if he finds his shoes comfy and then buying a pair untested because of what they said. You'd never do that... I hope....
....but I am too cheap to pay what they cost
Have you gone around to the Wild West shop and rented a few of their guns to try?
There's no bad options on your list. But each one fits our hands differently then the others. And finding The One that folds naturally into your grip consistently and with good overall contact pressure all around the grip area is a big key element for success for both accuracy and speed. And only YOU can figure out which guns fits your hand correctly. And that means trying a lot of them. Then form your own short list and go try the ones of the short list again. And although I know that a visit to the Wild West range and renting their guns isn't cheap in the long run it will be money well spent if it points you to your perfect fitting gun.
I'd suggest that you add CZ to your list to at least try.
What you want to feel is a sense of even contact pressure all the way around the grip and along the full length of the back strap. If you have pockets of low contact pressure then you also end up with spots of higher pressure. And during recoil the gun can pivot on those points of higher pressure and slip where the contact pressure is low. by finding a gun and learning the proper grip that gives you a consistent even contact pressure all over the gun you'll find that it both stays in place better and also assumes a natural and consistent grip more naturally. All the stuff that you want if you want to shoot the gun well.
The other things about how the mechanical parts of the gun perform are all more or less equal. Like I said up higher you don't have any dogs on that short list. So it comes down to how the gun matches up to YOU. And all the interwebz babble about "buy this because I use it and love it" means diddly squat for you. You need to find your own fit. Otherwise it's like asking a guy if he finds his shoes comfy and then buying a pair untested because of what they said. You'd never do that... I hope....



























