Thanks a lot Guys--Glock 21

No, they certainly are not Sigs. Sigs are DA/SA, hammer fired... re: archaic design.
A lot of people complain about the trigger, but I don't understand why. It has an audible and tactile reset, it has a consistent pull, consistent weight, and consistent travel. Very easy to learn imo. I take up the slack, feel the wall, take up the firmer 1/8" of slack, and bang it goes, every time.
I work on malfunction drills, but have never had one irl.

The empty space behind the mag isn't there because they ran out of polymer when they made your gun. It's there for your thumb to tug on the mag to ensure that it is inserted properly, and it's there to help you rip the mag out during a double feed malfunction.

IMO, everything about the g19 is top shelf, and as all glocks function the same, they are all top shelf.

Archaic design, that is funny.
Do not get me wrong, I like Glocks now, but the triggers are terrible.
 
Archaic design, that is funny.
Do not get me wrong, I like Glocks now, but the triggers are terrible.


This is what I see when a modern pistol uses a hammer... :p
800px-Pistolet-IMG_3196-b.jpg



I'm just breakin balls lol

I have a friend with a sig 226, with a trigger job done, and it is has a nice smooth/crisp pull.
The problem is the DA long initial pull.
It doesn't fit with my style of shooting, so I don't own one.

The Glock was never meant to be a bullseye gun. It's a combat gun with safety and predictability built in.
The trigger has been designed around the function of the gun.
If you don't shoot the way the glock was designed to be used, then you bought the wrong gun.
 
This is what I see when a modern pistol uses a hammer... :p
I'm just breakin balls lol

I have a friend with a sig 226, with a trigger job done, and it is has a nice smooth/crisp pull.
The problem is the DA long initial pull.
It doesn't fit with my style of shooting, so I don't own one.

The Glock was never meant to be a bullseye gun. It's a combat gun with safety and predictability built in.
The trigger has been designed around the function of the gun.
If you don't shoot the way the glock was designed to be used, then you bought the wrong gun.

I realize that and take no offense. Both Glocks and SIGs are top shelf, proven combat pistols. The differences, in my mind, do not decrease either's effectiveness, just take some getting use to.
 
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