Hk P8

Jordi09

Member
EE Expired
Rating - 100%
15   0   0
I have been looking at an HK USP in 9mm lately, but because of the polygonal barrel it is not recommend to shoot lead bullet (I am into reloading). Lead bullets don't cost much and I would like to get into casting in a near future.

Should I still shoot some lead with the USP, or buy an HK P8 with a standard barrel? I have not heard any review of the P8... They do not seem very popular, some of you have tried them?
 
I have been looking at an HK USP in 9mm lately, but because of the polygonal barrel it is not recommend to shoot lead bullet (I am into reloading). Lead bullets don't cost much and I would like to get into casting in a near future.

Should I still shoot some lead with the USP, or buy an HK P8 with a standard barrel? I have not heard any review of the P8... They do not seem very popular, some of you have tried them?

3K+ lead down the barrel of my USP with no problems. The issue with polygonal barrels and lead is at it's most acute in Glocks.
 
the lead only becomes an issue if u dont clean the barrel regularly, and lead deposits build up and causes increased pressure. running a wire brush and or boresnake through it ever 200rds or so should be fine.
 
The thing with the P8 is, it de-cocks to the "safety" position, not to the "fire" position the way a USP does (or SIG, most guns with a de-cocker). My girlfriend has a Beretta 90-two that de-cocks to the safety, and I don't think it is a desirable feature for holster work - and certainly not for any kind of timed competitive shooting. You can get around this by just clicking it back off safety before holstering... and if you are only drawing from a holster once per stage it is no big deal to to that.

It's a military thing. If Bundeswehr soldiers are going to carry a round in the chamber, I guess the brass wants it both de-cocked plus the safety on.. 100% of the time - so the gun is designed to function in a way that encourages this habit (i.e., you ahve to actually do something extra to take it off safety, not something extra to put it on safety). That is overkill by most people's standards.

The other thing with the P8 is... you can't carry it cocked and locked. To get it onto "safety" you necessarily have to de-#### the gun because "safety" is down, not up like a USP. I always thought that one of the more interesting features of the USP was that you could use it like a SIG (de-#### and holster) or like a 1911 (carry it "cocked and locked"). The P8 is more like the SIG system, but you have to click it back off safety after you de-#### in order to be able to just draw and pull the trigger and have the gun fire.

The issue of the barrels. I know the manufacturers say this... but it just seems like an extreme case of ass covering. I know tons of guys that shoot lead re-loads in GLOCK and USP's all the time and never have any problems with it. If you clean the gun every trip to the range you will have no problems.
 
Last edited:
The other thing with the P8 is... you can't carry it cocked and locked. To get it onto "safety" you necessarily have to de-#### the gun because "safety" is down,

You really need to know what you are talking about .The fire control positions are up to Fire move down 1 position to safe all the way down to decock the lever returns to safe .Yes the pistol can be carried locked and cocked
 
You really need to know what you are talking about .The fire control positions are up to Fire move down 1 position to safe all the way down to decock the lever returns to safe .Yes the pistol can be carried locked and cocked

O.k., fair enough. Thanks for pointing that out. I don't have a P8. I've shot a few of them over the years, and I used to have a USP in 9mm, but I didn't really like it. The only similar gun from that family I still have is the P2000. The P2000 and the P30 have no manual safety - so the "cocked and locked" idea has been dropped for this newer generation of pistols (but not for HK45 and HK 45C... which, like the USP were designed for the American market. The P2000 and P30 were designed for European police).

I thought I could remember that moving the lever down (to safety) on the P8 would bring the hammer down - but you have corrected me on that, so thank you. That is the way my girlfriend's Beretta is - and I find it bloody annoying - so I have developed this dislike of pistols that de-#### to the safety (granted they are not all the same ;)).

From what you are saying then, the P8 can be either cocked or de-cocked with the lever in this downward safety position. This is showing it de-cocked with the safety on:
p8.jpg


This is what the USP looks like on safety (also de-cocked, obviously):
usp.jpg


When I had a USP... I wasn't a big fan of the whole safety/de-cocking lever. I like the newer guns that have dropped it alltogether and moved the de-cocker to the back of the pistol. I didn't feel that there was enough room for me to get my thumb under it with the grip I wanted (high on the pistol) ... so I "rode" the de-cocker with my thumb, as in this video (of myself from a few years back)... and that wasn't ideal either, as it seemed to decrease the controllability of the gun for me (and with the big blocky grip I thought that controlability of the gun was not the strong point of that gun for me):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ADdeVoJ5RiM

Similar video. I actually move my thumb on top of the de-cocker before firing in this one.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m0LYkPJA8gc

When I look at these videos now... I think my grip and everything looks terrible. It is not surprising to me that this gun never became a favorite of mine. I am basically a SIG guy, and the USP didn't really jive with me.

By contrast, I have liked the P2000 a lot better, I can shoot a lot better with it, and in particular a lot more accurately in rapid fire:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m_nfKbnz8FE

Anyway... on the original question of this thread.... I myself wouldn't go out of my way to get a P8 or a USP, and lead bullets shouldn't be a deciding factor in my view. If you really think that you love the USP... see if you can try one out at a range first... and see if you can try the P2000 and/or P30L before buying. Anybody in Vancouver who wants to try the P2000 (or P7, SIG P229, P239, NP-34, or Beretta 90-two) send me a PM. My girlfriend and I are going to the public range (7) at PoCo most of the time now... now that the rainy season is in full force and the unsupervised (and uncovered) ranges are pretty wet up there - so shoule be easy to find on a Saturday afternoon... and I should have most of these guns with me... plus the new AR-15 in 9mm! :)
 
Last edited:
Back
Top Bottom