Want to buy the Glock that lost the Army handgun competition?

Don't know what to say. There are some things I have experience with and an almost infinite number of things I do not.

I worded it poorly. I meant there are other facets to a single topic, that you are very unaware of, yet speak as if you know it thoroughly. You being "exceptionally green", as you put it, explains that. In time your knowledge will grow. It's all good. Like I said, I was curious. :)
 
FWIW, after-market producers make replacement polymer frames for cheap for many of the popular SF models. The only time I've seen polymer frames fail to the point of needing replacement is when a gun goes KB. In that case, the military would scrap the whole works anyhow and pull a new one off the shelf.

The idea behind the MHS contract specifically was to be able to re-configure the gun from compact to full-size and add things like optics by just changing the slide. In Glock-speak, that would be like slapping an MOS slide onto your regular G17M frame.

The competition had specific requirements - all the entrants appear to have met them. the ergonomists at aberdeen scored the sig panels higher than glock's (and possibly others' submissions) because they panels adjust palmswell, not just grip thickness and beavertail length.

Not trying to be argumentative, I swear-- Just the more time I spend thinking about it, there is huge value in a self contained fire control group.

Not even specifically in case of a kB, but simple, stupid things that happen. a Couple of examples spring to mind:

--Flaming hot rifle barrel gets mashed against your gun-- Replace grip frame
--Take a high-speed tumble down a gravel road, road-rashing the outboard side of your service pistol-- Replace grip frame
--Take a piece of high-velocity debris to the side of the pistol-- Replace grip frame
--Mag-release gets murdered due to grunts-- Replace Grip frame.
--Get a new soldering iron for your birthday and make an unholy mess of your grip-frame-- Replace grip frame.

To make it even better, you need less armourers. Even an all steel gun takes fitting and finesse to bring back to original condition, grip frame replacements can be done in field, quick and dirty, no serial numbers, no fitting tiny pieces into tiny holes.

Not saying the Glock is a bad gun, or a sub-standard gun, it's not. It's just interesting that the modular Fire Control Group concept eliminates pretty much 80% of the objections to a polymer framed handgun. Other than recoil and bludgeoning ability.. :D

While replaceable slide and barrel assemblies are interesting, They're nothing new, and don't add nearly the same value.

I wonder if 25 years from now, if future Gun-Nuts will refer to traditional Polymer-framed guns, i.e. Glock, Ruger Sr9, et all and "first generation polymer guns."
 
I worded it poorly. I meant there are other facets to a single topic, that you are very unaware of, yet speak as if you know it thoroughly. You being "exceptionally green", as you put it, explains that. In time your knowledge will grow. It's all good. Like I said, I was curious. :)

That's a fair assessment, but do remember, that you specifically asked about years.
 
Consider having 5K 19 year old recruits going through basic training with little or no handgun experience and then ask yourself would a manual safety be a smart idea on a handgun?

I am just under 1,000 trained soldiers in my career. I suspect less than 10% were 19 years old or less, but about 95% had "little to no experience with a handgun".

Is a manual safety a smart idea on a handgun?

NOPE, not for a second.

2 reasons. 1st, mechanical. Guns with manual safeties are more complicated, mechanically and from an operator point of view, then non manual safety guns. More complicated = more time to learn and master. Full stop. NO agency in the world gives their students all the time that is needed, and instructors constantly have to drop material to fit the time available. If I had the option to actually drop mechanical components to stream line training, I would pee my pants.

Look at the Browning Hi Power. Manual Safety, Magazine Safety, Half #### Safety. All these things require time to explain, demonstrate, and then let the students fiddle with. Is it an objectively safer pistol. I highly doubt it, but I also doubt any jurisdiction in the world has done a comprehensive safety audit to objectively validate what firearm is safer/safest/safe enough compared to other in service firearms, from a design/feature point of view. I certainly have never seen one. There are also two different aspects to safety. First is handling safety, IE not having the gun go off when you don't want to. The other safety is operational dependability, having the gun go off when you need it to.

Manual safeties, half #### safeties, magazine safeties all cause stoppages. Gloves, sweat, oil, blood, sand, snow, stress, injury, darkness and on and on. More complicated tool means more things can go wrong, both from a user point of view and from a maintenance point of view. I have seen poorly trained operators, in combat, draw a pistol, fail to fire, tap the mag, attempt to rack several times but can't cause the slide won't move with the safety on (they didn't know the safety was on because use of safety was omitted from their training) and then throw the gun in the dirt out of frustration and go back to their malfunctioning primary. This is an extreme worst case scenario, and it was by no means entirely the guns fault, but a different firearm would have not been thrown in the dirt.

So that's the first reason. The second reason, is that as soon as you tell a class of 20 that the gun will not fire when it is on safe, the first thing that at least five of them will do is put it on safe and attempt to fire the gun. In my career I have witnessed at least 3 negligent discharges, and been witness to the charge parades of half a dozen more, and it is a common cause that the person was fingering the trigger out of boredom, which they though was not a big deal cause they thought it was on safe. Someone else can chime in if they have experience to the contrary, but in my little world I have never heard of someone getting bored and fingering the trigger of a firearm that never had a safety to begin with.

End of the day, SAFETY, is complex. There are many factors that affect accidents, the firearm being just one. Would I prefer a pistol without a safety. YES. But I would also prefer technical manuals written in the 21st century, more time in the classroom, more time on the simulator, more time on the range, and more mature, smarter, and better looking students.
 
Cameron SS - send a note to the US Army and explain to them they don't have any idea what they are doing. Let them know how deficient their selection process was and how utterly useless their requirement for a manual safety was. Let us know when they get back to you. Until then SIG won the contract, Glock lost. No matter how deficient the selection process might be that is the end result.

When it comes time to replace the Inglis my hope is the the selection is based upon price buying anyone of a half dozen or so mainstream polymer 9MM pistols with or without safeties. The decision will not affect my next purchase of a firearm.

Take Care

Bob
According to the US Army the average age of a new recruit was under 21 in 2012. In that year they processed 155,000 new recruits the lowest in decades. You still don't want a manual safety on a pistol? That number is almost 3x more than the Canadian Army and some here feel we should lecture them on how to manage their training. Let us know when they phone you.
 
So that's the first reason. The second reason, is that as soon as you tell a class of 20 that the gun will not fire when it is on safe, the first thing that at least five of them will do is put it on safe and attempt to fire the gun.

it is a common cause that the person was fingering the trigger out of boredom, which they though was not a big deal cause they thought it was on safe.

I've seen a ton of this too, particularly on the rifles, even people "tapping" their triggers as a kind of fidget. Now back in civvie life, I worked in professions where the first and only handguns handled by new recruits/employees are typically striker-fired Glocks and M&Ps. A lot of emphasis is placed on "keep your finger away from that trigger or it'll go off!" and lo and behold, everyone is real careful about their handling practices.



Cameron SS - send a note to the US Army and explain to them they don't have any idea what they are doing.

Are you honestly going to look at things like ACU uniforms (Or buying woodland uniforms for the Afghans) then try to tell anyone US Army procurement knows what it's doing 100% of the time? "They're a big army so they know better than anyone" is not the line of reasoning anyone should take seriously. By that line, China should have the best kit in the world, right?
 
Are you honestly going to look at things like ACU uniforms (Or buying woodland uniforms for the Afghans) then try to tell anyone US Army procurement knows what it's doing 100% of the time? "They're a big army so they know better than anyone" is not the line of reasoning anyone should take seriously. By that line, China should have the best kit in the world, right?

Its certainly no secret that the military - all militaries - make their share of procurement mistakes. (Perhaps more than their fair share.)
 
Are you honestly going to look at things like ACU uniforms (Or buying woodland uniforms for the Afghans) then try to tell anyone US Army procurement knows what it's doing 100% of the time? "They're a big army so they know better than anyone" is not the line of reasoning anyone should take seriously. By that line, China should have the best kit in the world, right?

No I honestly don't think they give a GD what a few Canadians think on a gun forum. That is what I think honestly, and moaning about Glock losing the contract is just a bunch of wasted spit frankly. As to the need for a safety - their training, their program, their requirements, their money their problem. BTW Glock submitted a gun with a safety. I guess they didn't feel they were in a position to lecture the US military either. Too, the 320 submitted and accepted by the US Army has a different trigger group than the commercial 320's so all this , the US Army bought a gun that is not drop safe is just hot air. They didn't.

Take Care

Bob
 
Cameron SS - send a note to the US Army and explain to them they don't have any idea what they are doing. Let them know how deficient their selection process was and how utterly useless their requirement for a manual safety was. Let us know when they get back to you. Until then SIG won the contract, Glock lost. No matter how deficient the selection process might be that is the end result.

When it comes time to replace the Inglis my hope is the the selection is based upon price buying anyone of a half dozen or so mainstream polymer 9MM pistols with or without safeties. The decision will not affect my next purchase of a firearm.

Take Care

Bob
According to the US Army the average age of a new recruit was under 21 in 2012. In that year they processed 155,000 new recruits the lowest in decades. You still don't want a manual safety on a pistol? That number is almost 3x more than the Canadian Army and some here feel we should lecture them on how to manage their training. Let us know when they phone you.

When did I ever suggest that the US Army has no idea what they are doing?

When did I ever suggest that their selection process was deficient.

When did I ever suggest that their requirement for a manual safety was useless.

When did I ever comment on the outcome of the tender, SIG vs Glock?

Lets take a breath shall we? You asked for my opinion, and I gave it. I respect your right to disagree, but the attitude and putting words in my mouth is not required.

What is it about being young or inexperienced that makes you think a safety is required, necessary, or even beneficial, given what I have shared above? You seem to ASSUME its necessary, but why?

Most professional instructors will always tell you to never trust the safety anyways. Unlike other weapon systems, the pistol is the secondary. The back up. The SHTF go-to gun. No one wages war with a pistol. It is for immediate close range self defense and moving through tight spaces. The safety is just one more thing in between you dying for your country or making the other guy die for his.

In my experience, The age of the shooter does not matter in the least. Whether you are 8, or 80, if you are learning something new, best to start simple. The number of recruits they processed also doesn't matter. Whether one person, or one million people, you need the right tool for the job. Quantity of shooters only affects the quantity of pistols needed. I highly doubt the cost of adding a safety would have affected overall contract price much, and regardless, being a competitive tender, I doubt the US military would have cared about what the added cost would have been, because at the end of the day they still would have chosen the lowest cost compliant/best value tender.

I have no idea why the US army needed a manual safety. I don't care. It might be part of a larger training methodology preference. Are you familiar with the SOP for loading an M4? by the book? M4 is functionally identical to the Canadian C7/C8, but the two militaries have very different handling drills.

Canadian Load/Ready drill:
Insert Magazine. Cycle Action. Place weapon on safe.

American Load/Ready drill:
Cycle Action. Place weapon on safe. Insert Magazine. Cycle Action again.

Any opinions on why that is? Some might say that the US way is a safer way to load the rifle, because the safety is on BEFORE a round is chambered. Sounds good in theory, but I would like to see the stats, if they exist, between Canadian and US basic training courses and the rate of negligent discharge. Even if there was a notable difference, like I said before, the equipment is only one factor.

Maybe the US army wants to have a standardized set of weapons drills that transfer across as many weapon systems as possible, and putting a safety on the pistol brings it into line with the rest of the fleet. I can see the value in that, regardless of objective need for the manual safety.

Even if the firearm was inherently less safe without a manual safety, this difference could easily be mitigated through better, or more training. Some bean counter may have been the one who sat down and said manual safeties are PRESUMABLY cheaper to buy than adequate training (because good training is always expensive), and that alone was responsible for the requirement.

Whats your theory? I've re-read all your posts, and you seem to take for granted that the presence of a safety guarantees a reduction in accidents. Do you have any science you would like to share that supports this? I wouldn't for a second assume that just because the military wants a manual safety, that there is a direct and measurable affect on accidents. Lots of things that were commonly accepted as self-evident and not needing evidence are being turned on their head every day.

So I find your insight on the competition and tender issue interesting, and informative. I have no particular issue with who won or why.

Still doesn't make me want a manual safety, or convince me that its beneficial.

Kindly,

Cameron

I've seen a ton of this too, particularly on the rifles, even people "tapping" their triggers as a kind of fidget. Now back in civvie life, I worked in professions where the first and only handguns handled by new recruits/employees are typically striker-fired Glocks and M&Ps. A lot of emphasis is placed on "keep your finger away from that trigger or it'll go off!" and lo and behold, everyone is real careful about their handling practices.

Ditto. Manual Safeties are usually a crutch that no one needs, but when you have one, you are more likely to lean on it.

If anyone could actually produce some robust and compelling data to show controlled studies that demonstrated a clear decrease of accidents directly from the presence and proper use of manual safeties, I would quickly change my mind, but for the time being I remain skeptical that they have anything to do with actual safety, and maybe the appearance of safety.
 
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That is what I think honestly, and moaning about Glock losing the contract is just a bunch of wasted spit frankly.

Neither the Glock nor the P320 have manual safeties, but both added them as required by the contract, so I don't see how brand loyalty factors in here. (I think it's fishy that Sig underbid Glock, but time will tell on that)

So when you ask

Consider having 5K 19 year old recruits going through basic training with little or no handgun experience and then ask yourself would a manual safety be a smart idea on a handgun?

The answer for an increasing number is "probably not." The Yanks decided they needed them, the Brits decided they didn't, we could go on all day. Armies are notoriously resistant to change, I'm surprised they didn't insist on a magazine disconnect while they were at it, honestly.
 
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Buncha bull for nothing. Who uses handguns for anything in a wartime situation? Lets be real. A lot of money/time spent on nothing more than a fancy belt buckle. FFS. Who gives a frig?
 
Buncha bull for nothing. Who uses handguns for anything in a wartime situation? Lets be real. A lot of money/time spent on nothing more than a fancy belt buckle. FFS. Who gives a frig?

My sarcasm meter got broken over in the Would You Vote Liberal thread.

Is this post serious?

I think the guys who will be taking that pistol into combat might give a frig.
 
Are you honestly going to look at things like ACU uniforms (Or buying woodland uniforms for the Afghans) then try to tell anyone US Army procurement knows what it's doing 100% of the time? "They're a big army so they know better than anyone" is not the line of reasoning anyone should take seriously. By that line, China should have the best kit in the world, right?

Yes that's his entire argument. The competition shows the Glock performed better but was not chosen for cost reasons. But arguing with that guy is like convincing a liberal to de-restrict the AR15.

In his mind, the selected pistol is superior in every way. By his logic, a norinco is better than an STI trojan because it went bang and cost less.

A safety was needed because Gocks are inherently unsafe. The 10,000,000 people and afency operators before the MHS contract have it all wrong and only by the grace of god do they not have "glock leg" - something more accurately described as "striker fired pistol meets lack of training leg".
 
Just the more time I spend thinking about it, there is huge value in a self contained fire control group.

To be frank, it's a solution looking for a problem.

A polymer lower for either gun costs a few dollars to replace. And the lower replacement rate on either gun is probably quite low. Glock is the army handgun in 24 countries and none of them are clammoring for a more replaceable lower.
 
Now that sig was awarded the contract by default and the US Army saved 100 million, we are left to wonder with morbid curiosity how they are going to squander those savings.
 
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