Don't forget the MP's carry P225's. Never quite understood why they went for a gun that holds 8 rounds of 9mm.
Yes. My bad. I always forget about the MP's... Not sure why. hahaha
Don't forget the MP's carry P225's. Never quite understood why they went for a gun that holds 8 rounds of 9mm.
As it stands, nothing decent will become the new CF pistol because of the downright insulting demand that the trade secrets of the manufacturer be given up so the pistol can be made in Quebec..
Agreed re manufacturing data, however, it was Kitchener, Ontario rather than Quebec.
Why not just brand-new SA FN Hi-Powers, a nice ergo grip and LOT'S of training?
Don't forget the MP's carry P225's. Never quite understood why they went for a gun that holds 8 rounds of 9mm.
And the MP's got the P225 because they were purchased for CF pilots short notice for Desert Storm, being slim enough to comfortably carry in a shoulder holster.
Having bought over a thousand of them, when the war was over and the MP's asked for a new pistol, they just reissued them the extra airforce ones.
It was not that they asked for a single stack 9mm, they just got what was already in the system.
Ugh...
We needed to drag this thread here too?
Not pull the trigger for disassembly was a clever way to disallow the Glock...
Requirements can be cleverly written to give advantages to one model, without writing a sole source justification. Happens all the time, when what should be a fair and open competition is skewed by a user/requirement writer toward a favored system.
Pulling the trigger to disassemble the gun is a double edged sword. From Gaston's perspective, it made darn sure the gun was empty before taking it down, a good thing. From the safety perspective it could lead to an AD.
I know training can prevent misadventures but accidents do happen....and have with Glocks for this reason.
I don't think it is fair to write it into the requirements that the new gun cannot be taken down without pulling the trigger. Let the guns compete and have a fair comparison of the pros and cons of each one, including how they are taken down.
Rich
Pulling the trigger for dis-assembly doesn't lead to NDs any more than putting your car in gear leads to speeding.
That is 100% a personal safety issue, not a gun design one. Someone who doesn't unload a firearm before dis-assembly will be careless/unsafe regardless of how the firearm in taken down.
Shawn
You will never see new HPs because the people who shoot the fricken things once or twice a year think they suck because they couldn't hit the broad side of a barn.
as for the trigger issue ..... well , i have heard them all , even with the sigs .....as they are a dangerous weapon because there is no safety..........Its a fricken weapon ! they are all dangerous!
Ugh...
We needed to drag this thread here too?
Not pull the trigger for disassembly was a clever way to disallow the Glock...
Requirements can be cleverly written to give advantages to one model, without writing a sole source justification. Happens all the time, when what should be a fair and open competition is skewed by a user/requirement writer toward a favored system.