Oh, please, please, please let me join in! I've kept tabs on this entire discussion!
If the grip frame of the gun is too large for your hand, you will not hold it in line with your forearm and the recoil will kick the muzzle away from the palm of your hand resulting in 9:00 hits on your target, assuming you are right handed.
This (as far as I've seen), is plainly wrong.
The Glock trigger has a long heavy, and in some cases very heavy, initial pull.
And how does every pull after that differ?
subsequent shots can be made rapidly and accurately with a short light trigger action.
Ah! And where did you get this Glock you speak of?
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.
Wait! How did we get back there?!
Now it is possible to simply waste the shot so you can return to the light short pull...
Phew! So all I have to do is yank on the trigger & we're back to that OTHER pull? Thank goodness!
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.
Ok! So all I have to do with a Glock is never take my finger off the trigger!.... Wait a minute, that doesn't seem right....
DA on a pistol serves no purpose
Well, Mr. Boomer, it allows you to fire a pistol that has been decocked. Some people (for appearances or political, among other, reasons) like to carry their pistols without the hammer cocked. (Would you like to talk about striker fired pistols? I don't think you're ready.)
IMHO, the trigger on a DA/SA pistol is leaps and bounds ahead of the Glock trigger
(This will become important later...)
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.
Right! Not at ALL like a Glock!
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.
And, of course, I just HAVE to ask what you base this on. And not a single DA/SA in the bunch. Why, exactly?
The advantage I have over some is that I have used guns in stressful situations
Ooooh! I can't WAIT to hear about these!!!
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.
Ummm, what if they were based on fantasy?
But I digress.... He goes on!
The problem with the Glock trigger is lag time. When under stress you can loose contact with the trigger and instead of firing with a compressed break in a half second it takes a second and a half to get the shot off, because you are expecting the light pull and when the gun doesn't fire you have to diagnose the problem, do I have a failure to feed? Do I have a dead primer? Oh right, I lost contact with the trigger and have to press the trigger harder.
I gots nothing. Have you EVER fired a Glock?
Perhaps we can reasonably expect a 3-5 pound pull from the trigger in the set position and perhaps 10-15 pound for the initial pull.
(Again, he's talking about Glocks)
I can't wait for Glock to figure that out! (This is getting tiring.)
SIGs have issues as well, aside from the sticker price
Really? What are those??
(I'm a SIG guy...) (I'm also anti-idiot.)
I would like to know what you thought you accomplished by weighing your ammo though.
Well, genius, I'm thinking it'll reassure him a little bit that he'll won't have a squib. So if things don't go BANG, at least he can tap and rack and expect a bang next time without his hand leaving him.
The fastest and surest means of dealing with a stoppage is by carrying a backup as you can draw and fire with your weak hand faster than you can diagnose, clear, and reload a stoppage in your primary.
You think that you can recognise a misfire and get to a backup faster than I can clear a misfire?
I wonder if you would pull the trigger a second time or rack the slide? I'll bet you'd pull the trigger again, and probably get the same results. With a 1911 you'd be more inclined to rack the slide.
With a 1911? MORE INCLINED? Just out of curiosity, what happens with YOUR 1911s when you pull the trigger for a second time??
(At this point, I'm starting to think Airsoft commando...)
Set or nonset, that is a duel mode, which is a better term I suppose. The fact is you can only choose the unset mode, you cannot fire the initial shot from the set position. In a fight, because the gun unset the trigger if you loose contact with the trigger could leave you not knowing which condition the trigger is in.

I bet I know!
Running a gun dry is an undesirable situation, as you don't get to choose when to reload, although training must include dealing with the possibility. By the way junior, the reason you rack the 1911 slide automatically to clear a round that has failed to fire, is because that is your only option. A Glock or a DA pistol gives you the option of racking the slide or simply pulling the trigger in hopes that the round will fire on the second attempt.
OH! SOOOOO CLOSE! I'm glad you read ahead about the 1911, but before you call anyone "junior", you should probably be careful about stating that Glocks have a second strike capability.. So close..
Last night I talked to the fellow who allowed me to shoot his Glock last year and asked him if I might have the chance to examine it more closely and shoot it again, and and he said his department was so dissatisfied with them that they pulled them and issued shiny new 9mm SIGs.
And which department would this be?
The best check you can give your ammo is to run it through your gun to ensure that the gun will cycle properly. If you come across any rounds that appear damaged, or out of spec they need to be culled.
Again, I'm glad you read about real firearms, but I'm thinking MAYBE before you actually handle one, you should find someone with actual experience.
Alright, there's more, but I've found this to be quite enough entertainment for one evening. I look forward to the response. As a last note, here's a quote I stole:
quote:
Originally posted by tanksoldier:
There is a difference between a rational threat assessment made by informed individuals who have been there and done that, and drivel posted from mommy's basement by someone who hasn't seen daylight in weeks.