Here's the problem as I see it, and these criticisms are towards the pistol when it is used in the life saving role. You are free to disagree. The Glock trigger has a long heavy, and in some cases very heavy, initial pull. Then provided you do no loose contact with the trigger, subsequent shots can be made rapidly and accurately with a short light trigger action. In a fight, you are in as stressful a situation as you are likely to ever find yourself in, with the possible exception of finding yourself on #2 between Calgary and Edmonton in summer time traffic, bumper to bumper at 140 after having spent the previous 15 years driving in Churchill Manitoba at 40 without another vehicle in sight. It is possible when under stress, that you will break contact with the trigger. When (not if) you do, you are back to that long heavy pull, which will cause you to be exposed to fire for a longer period of time. On the range you can shoot a decent group with a long heavy pull, but it takes time, and time is not something to be taken for granted in a fight. Now it is possible to simply waste the shot so you can return to the light short pull, but you are morally, ethically and legally responsible for every round you send down range, particularly if that fight is in an urban environment. The greatest danger though is when you do not realize that you have broken contact with the trigger, you expect a short light pull, but instead have a long heavy one. That is when you get killed.
Neither am I fan of DA/SA autos. DA on a pistol serves no purpose, where as on a revolver it cycles the cylinder to a subsequent chamber providing you a fresh round. However, IMHO, the trigger on a DA/SA pistol is leaps and bounds ahead of the Glock trigger because the operator gets to choose whether he will manually #### the hammer or simply pull the trigger. Once the hammer is cocked, nothing changes until the safety is put on and the hammer is dropped to its rest position. DA only is a really bad idea, but at least it is the same every time, regardless of whether you break contact with the trigger or not.
By contrast a conventional SA pistol only works one way. A short amount of take up, a clean break, then release pressure on the trigger to reset the trigger. If you loose contact with the trigger nothing changes, and each subsequent shot is the same as the previous one. In a fight you are free to do whatever it is you need to do, and the pistol will still fire with a clean 4 pound pull.
That being the case the best fighting pistols, again in my opinion, are the 1911, the P-35, and the SA version of the CZ-75. I have fired perhaps 500 rounds through various Glock pistols, and that was enough for me to make an informed opinion. I will say that the pistols I shot shot very accurately, and I never experienced a stoppage. I don't much care about the shape of the grip frame as you can get used to almost anything provided the handle is of a size that allows you to assume the correct grip, but you can determine that at the time of purchase.
If I was mandated to carry a Glock, I would get my head around it and work with it until I had developed some level of comfort with it. The advantage I have over some is that I have used guns in stressful situations, and because I recognize the short comings of the Glock from the outset I might be better prepared then the individual who puts blind faith in his marksmanship and in the drills he has run at static ranges on face on, stationary, single dimensional targets. The remarkable commercial success of the Glock products does indicate that my opinions are in the minority, but I am not about to change them.
I've rarely seen the standard Glock trigger described as long or heavy, maybe it is compared to a good SAO trigger but its far better than you get with the DA first shot on a DA/SA duty pistol, and is still probably better than most thereafter.
Heck, even the Hi Power and many 1911s aren't so great out of the box, with heavier and crunchier pulls than any Glock I've ever tried. Another thing about cocked and locked capable designs is that aside from the 1911, few seem to come with a really positive and easy-to-get-at thumb safety out of the box, which is definately important on a pistol that may need to be carried in that manner.
Messing with an awkward safety will slow you down far more than "falling off" the Glock trigger reset supposedly will!
Anyways the thinking behind DA/SA is that the long heavy first shot pull will make a ND less likely under day to day real world conditions, after the first shot the individual is now probably shooting defensively and has no need of a fudge resistant trigger pull. I'm not saying I agree with it but that's the reasoning behind it.



















































