Safety issues with P7M8
Ardent said:
Hmm... The same handling safety rules apply to the P7 as most other pistols, only better given you just release your grip pressure and you're on "safe"... I fail to see how this system is not appropriate for "beginners or intermediates" as you say, for I feel those individuals would have more of an issue with a Glock, 1911, or even a double action safety wise.
Please explain what the safety issue is.
And just for reference, the P7's amazing accuracy (stunned me, literally) is due in large part to its barrel being fixed, not so much the rifling configuration or bore axis, but both those are indeed well designed.
I looked up the articles (Vsier - 1994), I referred to and here in short form are the results:
1. Accidentally squeezing grip and trigger simultaneously, or the trigger first and then the grip.
2.Eighty per cent of police officers ( at least in Germany) have a negative attitude towards their service sidearm and prefer not to use them in the first place.
3. Police administrators don't seem to see the necessity to provide adequate training for this type of pistol.
It is also mentioned that the P7M8 was being used by LE forces in Lower Saxony, Thuringia, Saxony , North Rhine-Westphalia and Bavaria. In Baden Wuerttemberg these pistols were only issued to Special Forces Units. There were several serious injuries and a number of "accidental" deaths reported by the police forces and one Special Forces officer shot off his index finger ( I assume it was the left one).
When the New Jersey State Police switched from revolvers to the P7M8 in 1983, three officers shot themselves in the leg during the first month.
All the accidents can be traced to improper use. There is a "Safety Trigger" available (at least it was in 1994) which is very easily installed, btw.
Also of interest is that 95% of unauthorized users could not fire the pistol. These are just a few of the points made in Viser(Sights).
I still maintain that these pistols should only be in the hands of experienced shooters.