HangFire88
Regular
- Location
- Winnipeg, MB
Hmmm, wonder how a guy would come up with a post like that![]()
Sounds like an autobiography!
Hmmm, wonder how a guy would come up with a post like that![]()
I also find that hard to believe...I am having a hard time thinking of a single trainer that I have heard of who does not recommend Glocks.
I could very readily type out a list of maybe fifty trainers with serious credentials who recommend the Glock.
Could you list off 5000 who do not recommend the Glock? That would be hard to imagine.
I also find that hard to believe...I am having a hard time thinking of a single trainer that I have heard of who does not recommend Glocks.
I could very readily type out a list of maybe fifty trainers with serious credentials who recommend the Glock.
Could you list off 5000 who do not recommend the Glock? That would be hard to imagine.
Unfortunately, less than 1% of professional trainers recommend Glocks.
Yeah - this. I even know trainers who don't particularly like the Glock themselves but still recommend it as a solid and reliable blaster...
im not saying the glock trigger cannot be mastered, I am just saying that its like mastering the double action revolver, which
IE, harder, and to no benifit, other then now you can shoot a glock/DA revolver type gun.
if thats the kind of pull you like, by all means buy glock, its not a bad gun,
but like i said, be prepared to have to pull just like a DA revolver...
its not better trigger control, its just different, and harder... harder is not always better... and again, most guns shoot with normal style travel to a clean break, be they rifle, shotgun, or pistol.
\
A large number of handgun shooters tend to release the trigger fully, not simply SA shooters. For every shooter I've seen "ride the reset" I see about 10 to 15 that release it fully or far more than needed between shots.
You can do it the easy way or the hard way.
The Hard Way:
Buy a Browning Hi Power, then a Glock 17 Gen 3, then a Sig 226, then a Glock 19 Gen 3, then another Sig 226, then a Nornico 1911, then a Springfield 1911, and then a Glock 17 Gen 2, then an HK P7, then another Sig 226. Then you realize it's you that doesn't know how to shoot, not the fault of the pistols you've used. So then you buy an HK P2000 and really try to learn how to shoot, but then realize that there's pretty much nothing better than a Gen 3 Glock 17, so you buy that.
The Easy Way:
Buy a Glock 17 Gen 3 and learn how to f**king shoot it.
You can do it the easy way or the hard way.
The Hard Way:
Buy a Browning Hi Power, then a Glock 17 Gen 3, then a Sig 226, then a Glock 19 Gen 3, then another Sig 226, then a Nornico 1911, then a Springfield 1911, and then a Glock 17 Gen 2, then an HK P7, then another Sig 226. Then you realize it's you that doesn't know how to shoot, not the fault of the pistols you've used. So then you buy an HK P2000 and really try to learn how to shoot, but then realize that there's pretty much nothing better than a Gen 3 Glock 17, so you buy that.
The Easy Way:
Buy a Glock 17 Gen 3 and learn how to f**king shoot it.
After months of research, I got it:
Oops, it's not a 9 mm ... but I couldn't resist it!




























