Choosing first handgun

Greetings everyone. I am also new to this forum and I saw this thread. I am looking to purchase a Sig P250 as my first handgun because I like the DAO trigger for safety reasons.

You won't like it for long, lol.

The best safety lies between your ears!
 
The SIG P320 is the upgrade to striker fire of the P250, which is hammer fired. It has been chosen by the US Army for their modular pistol. It's only a few hundred dollars more than the P250 and worth every penny. Search it on here and you'll see.
 
The SIG P320 is the upgrade to striker fire of the P250, which is hammer fired. It has been chosen by the US Army for their modular pistol. It's only a few hundred dollars more than the P250 and worth every penny. Search it on here and you'll see.

Thank you B.H.B. I will do some more digging into the P320.
 
Try Them All Before You Commit

Hello everyone.
I'm new to this site, this is my first post.
I am getting my first handgun, I have a hard time choosing though. After weeks of research I have it narrowed down at least. The Ruger 9e, Walther ppx, Sig Sauer p250, and a surplus Beretta 92s. The two front runners are the walther and sig. I'm on a budget as you probably noticed. Does anyone have any advice or suggestions? Thank you!

Without dissing all the well heeled advice you will or have received, get down to a local range and troll through as many different handguns as your budget can handle. Fire as many different manufacturers and calibers as you find interesting. In fact write down all the models here and give them a run.

Considering all well intentioned opinions what they don't consider is personal level fit and finish and the hand eye interface which is uniquely yours. Your personal interpretation of hand strength, grip, forearm stress, sight picture and a whole #$%^ load more considerations cannot be debated into a final purchase choice, or least it shouldn't be.

Get some hands on over a few visits and you'll never suffer from buyers remorse....

For myself if it does not have 10mm stamped on the frame I don't even look at it.


IPSC
  • - G40 Razor Red Dot
  • - G20 Trijicon Nite Sights Competition Trigger
  • - Nighthawk Custom Richard Heinie 6" Long Slide
 
I agree with AV8. I would add that a $5000 Nighthawk 1911 is not a good choice for a first pistol, however. Also, that advice on elitists rolex guns was not solicited.
 
I'm getting a Jericho 491, it's a military proven pistol with great reviews.

The Jericho 941 is a good handgun but if you're leaning in that direction I would just get a Shadow "1".

Remember, the firearm's the cheapest part of the equation.

P.S. My vote still goes to the M&P 2.0 or Ruger 9E. The Ruger 9E has a very good trigger and I think a site sponsor (Tenda?) has them on sale for $419.
 
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The Jericho 941 is a good handgun but if you're leaning in that direction I would just get a Shadow "1".

Remember, the firearm's the cheapest part of the equation.

P.S. My vote still goes to the M&P 2.0 or Ruger 9E. The Ruger 9E has a very good trigger and I think a site sponsor (Tenda?) has them on sale for $419.

I took a chance on that ruger deal. Even withough buying a second mag to go with it it still seemed too good to pass up. Don't see it for less than $700 for anywhere else really . Maybe I should have got two lol
 
I took a chance on that ruger deal. Even withough buying a second mag to go with it it still seemed too good to pass up. Don't see it for less than $700 for anywhere else really . Maybe I should have got two lol

Just remove the magazine disconnect (easy DIY) and enjoy. It's one of the best "budget" handguns I've ever owned/fired.
 
At one point I was really into modern-styled handguns: Glock, Sig, Beretta, HK... I used to shun 1911s, that is - until I actually had a chance to handle a Kinder 1911 in 9mm. Man, it was love at first sight... After that, all my other polymer-framed guns just seemed awkward by comparison. I'm not going to suggest that 1911s are the end-all/be-all of handguns, but I really wish I'd tried one out many years ago. Sometimes it's worth it to pay a little more and get exactly what you'll be happy with for a long time as opposed to settling for something in an arbitrary price range. At the end of the day, the cost of the gun is really academic when you consider the cost to feed it.
 
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