I should mention the Glock is a Gen 4 and comes with 4 mags and is $40 less then the Beretta with 2 mags.
Another Question
What's the average weight on a Glock trigger and what's the weight of the Beretta on Sinle and double action?
I should mention the Glock is a Gen 4 and comes with 4 mags and is $40 less then the Beretta with 2 mags.
Another Question
What's the average weight on a Glock trigger and what's the weight of the Beretta on Sinle and double action?
So I've narrowed it down to these two handguns. I have shot the Glock and handled the Beretta. I have no plans on getting into shooting competitions etc. I do plan on taking a handgun shooting course thos spring. Just want a solid accurate semi 9mm that will eat almost any ammo and last a long time and be reliable. Currently I just have a S&W 357 and have had an SR9 in the past.
Any input will be greatly appreciated.
Both your choices are good guns in the same price range. The big difference is one is hammer fired SA/DA and one is striker fired.
You said you had an SR9. Was there something you did not like about it?
You have a S&W 357. What do you like about it that makes this a keeper for you?
The answers to the above might help direct you in your next purchase.
This isn't even a question. Glock every time. They're slick handguns. Their ergonomics paired with the proper grip make for a rock solid connection between your hands. The Glock feels like it's part of me.
Slide mounted safeties make for some of the worst encounters while operating the slide and also during shooting. Inherited flaws such as the safety position and the off chance individual using the gun racks the slide and decocks the gun. Before anyone says, "whoa bro there's a way to grip under the safety to stop that". I'm well aware of how to run the Beretta. I have to give points the Glock again, the Glock is all business. 3 passive safeties buit into the gun make it well protected from abuse, for myself I love the double action trigger when I'm drawing on target.
The Glock is a tougher, more reliable handgun. It will be there every step of the way for you. The best advice I can give you is that your growth in handgun shooting skills will depend on how well you apply yourself. What that boils down to is this, I've seen a lot of people give up and blame the gun no matter what they bought.
That being said buy the Glock 17, never look back. Leave your trigger the hell alone, upgrade your sights, and shoot the hell out of it.
This isn't even a question. Glock every time. They're slick handguns. Their ergonomics paired with the proper grip make for a rock solid connection between your hands. The Glock feels like it's part of me.
Slide mounted safeties make for some of the worst encounters while operating the slide and also during shooting. Inherited flaws such as the safety position and the off chance individual using the gun racks the slide and decocks the gun. Before anyone says, "whoa bro there's a way to grip under the safety to stop that". I'm well aware of how to run the Beretta. I have to give points the Glock again, the Glock is all business. 3 passive safeties buit into the gun make it well protected from abuse, for myself I love the double action trigger when I'm drawing on target.
The Glock is a tougher, more reliable handgun. It will be there every step of the way for you. The best advice I can give you is that your growth in handgun shooting skills will depend on how well you apply yourself. What that boils down to is this, I've seen a lot of people give up and blame the gun no matter what they bought.
That being said buy the Glock 17, never look back. Leave your trigger the hell alone, upgrade your sights, and shoot the hell out of it.
Lol, the Glock fanboyism is strong in this thread... How many times can you write "Glock" in one post before it gets redundant?
That was ,tongue in cheek, kinda my point. I guess that the Glock shooters kinda know what they may be in for and have brought maybe a little of it on themselves.
I didn't really like the SR9. I couldnt shoot it well(keep in mind it was my first handgun)and it felt kinda cheap.
My S&W is a 66 Combat. I like the weight and the grip. I also really like the angle action which is what I shoot it in.