+1
There's nothing wrong with J.M. Browning's original design....
I agree, Browning was against the grip safety, but I read the army ordanance board made him incorporate it, and the lanyard ring. Someone said something about the calvalry being really influential, and they had concerns about reloading while galloping?
Anyway. I don't have to worry about that, or about shooting myself in the leg.
I'm a formal target shooter, not IPSC or anything. We shoot one shot at a time, very, very slowly, trying to control the micro-millimeter muscle wiggle. I know taking two or more minutes for every single shot might sound boring as spit for you action shooters, but hey, it works for us.
None of the olympic style guns I've used like my Tau-7 or others like my Dan Wesson revolver, or my target rifles ...etc...etc..etc.. have any sort of mechanical safety. When a gun does come with a safety the competitor almost always immediately disables them.
It's hard to explain to an action shooter I guess, but in slow fire for score, you're trying to get dead calm, and trying to make a trigger break, pushing harder, harder, harder, in the zone......... only to discover your shot won't release because you accidentally snapped on a manual safety....AAAAAGGGGGHHHHH!!!!!
It screws with your whole cycle, and can upset your whole day, usually 60 shots for men, 40 for women.