... Some of these posters here have no clue about the mark 23 ...none - zero - nada....
I thank all that have replied or commented because I do value the technical knowledge and common sense of many fellow gunners. However, I tend to support the above comment.
While I lack field experience (have none) with the Mark 23, I educated myself about it and played with it. Enough to be very much interested in it and cough up premium smoked bacon. By design, life expectancy, rounds fired before failure(reliability) and accuracy, the HK45, USP and Mark 23 are definitively more technically advanced than any other
MILITARY/Special Ops pistols out there. Twist of irony, it is recognized in the public eye as an extremely accurate
target pistol for those who have the paws for it. That is where all the technical mojo goes adrift: is at the expense of ergonomics of many shooters hand. I know of the HK.45 and USP but they don't tickle my fancy like the Mark 23 does. Just an amazing gun totally different than those I already own - none with polymer frame.
Reality check on
I live in Kanukistan. Where do I shoot restricted?
Reality check Off
Yes its a big gun, so what if holsters are rare for it? I'M not a member of Seal Team Six and I don't plan to shop at CrappyTires, VictoriasSecrap or Loblahz with it. I don't plan to shoot IPSC with it either. IMHO and except for overall dimension, comparing a 4.6+ lb boat anchor (Desert Eagle) with a Mark 23 (2.46 lb) is like saying you know deep sea diving because once a SOB you call friend pushed you in the pool. At equivalent skills and 50 yards, a Mark 23 shooter will routinely outclass a DE shooter.
Back to topic. I'm a gun nut and I have the opportunity to own a technically advanced engineering wonder of a pistol that I can comfortably use as occasional plinker. It is far from cheap (2250$). I did not buy it and gave myself a week to drink about it. I'm just the everyday gun nut with a heart saying
BUY! while the brain says
DON'T, hence the titled question: H&K Mark 23 - to buy or not to buy?
Again, thank you all for your feedback.