Whether you train with your gun or not, having extra features and levers are a disadvantage when things GO WRONG. Shooting old fart style at the range, it does not matter, you will not see a difference. If levers and extra parts would not make a difference, LE agencies would be using revolvers.
Close your eyes for a second and think you are a police officer, you are in gun fight/bank robbery/ whatever. You gun malfunctions, at this point in time, having a safety will require you to check another part in the firearm, that after you rack the slide to chamber another round, most likely you will go and feel that the safety is switched off, this, will take an extra few seconds or less, all will depend on your speed and training, and a (few) extra second(s) can cost you your life.
Simplicity is an advantage when your heart rate is up, adrenalin rushing through your veins. Every decision you make takes a milisecond but feels like an eternity. Less is more.
I see the simplicity as a benefit in a real worst case scenario, and this is proven by how many police officers choose to carry the G option against other more classic and old designs. I have not heard of accidental discharges that includes deaths in a long time. There are a few in Youtube, although I am sure none of those include a fatality.
Now days, single action only law enforcement guns as the glock, have over 10 LBS trigger pull, this is a legal requirement and are know as NY-triggers (I think to being first implemented in New York, but do not take me on that).
I do not shoot Glock, and I doubt I will ever shoot one. I have tried them, they are fine. I like their simplicity not only in the exterior design but also how easy is to swap parts in the case something breaks. Most likely, anybody with half a brain will get the Glock working, whereas for instance, the HK LEM option of the GLOCK will take a more elaborate gunsmithing approach & tools.
This thread needs some of TDC's input. His glocky sense tingles every time it is typed into a CGN thread!
If you can guarantee you will never make a mistake while holding a gun, you are able to predict your capabilities with far greater certainty than I can and I don't feel that I am in any position to discuss much with you, because I fundamentally lack the ability to function on that level of guaranteed perfection. I just don't believe that I can guarantee that I will never make a mistake with a gun, and that's just my own cross to bear. On the plus side, things like the four fundamental firearms safety rules were designed to help people like me function with guns, even at my sub-perfect level.
Personally my draw times are no different on a Glock than on a 1911, because I sweep the safety during the drawstroke. There is no time lost for me. If you do things sequentially rather than simultaneously, I can see how it would slow you down. Personally I'd just switch to doing it during the drawstroke, but we've all got our methods.
Wrong, go read a book. Glock pistols are NOT SINGLE ACTION. They are in fact double action only, more commonly referred to as SAFE DOUBLE ACTION because of the THREE INTERNAL PASSIVE SAFETIES. I'm getting real tired of uneducated people spouting bullsh*t when they clearly haven't the faintest idea what the ##### they're talking about. If you don't know, don't open your mouth.
The popularity of heavy triggers on LE guns is not "a legal requirement", it is a department policy due to said departments legal team believing such bullsh*t will somehow mitigate negligent or questionable shootings. The reality is that all shootings are deemed as unjust by the public regardless of facts or circumstances. A heavy trigger as a stop gap for proper training tells me said department is more incompetent than those who don't mandate heavy triggers.
So lets recap for all the uneducated in this thread as there seems to be plenty.
Glock pistols have THREE PASSIVE SAFETIES, ALL OF WHICH DO NOT REQUIRE YOUR COGNITIVE INPUT TO ACTIVATE OR DEACTIVATE. The "Glock advantage" is more than just the absence of an obsolete manual/active safety. The low bore axis, the minimal parts count, the weight, the magazine capacity, the finish, the positive reset on the trigger and of course the cost are all huge advantages over other designs. Regardless, you people need to stop reading and believing bullsh*t marketing slogans. Evaluate a product for what it is and what YOU WANT TO DO WITH IT.
Some in this thread get it, most don't...
You called sir, I answered.
TDC
good point, I am kind of agree with you, the three internal glock safety are for the trigger safety, which do not bring any safety other than just above your shoulder...... self control.....You are being a technicist and although you are CORRECT, what we are talking about here has nothing to do with what you described, which is NOT the function of a GLOCK TRIGGER.
You called sir, I answered.
TDC
Glocks (IN REAL LIFE) are not double action only, a double action only gun, has a different trigger feel...
Wrong, go read a book. Glock pistols are NOT SINGLE ACTION. They are in fact double action only, more commonly referred to as SAFE DOUBLE ACTION because of the THREE INTERNAL PASSIVE SAFETIES. I'm getting real tired of uneducated people spouting bullsh*t when they clearly haven't the faintest idea what the ##### they're talking about. If you don't know, don't open your mouth.
The popularity of heavy triggers on LE guns is not "a legal requirement", it is a department policy due to said departments legal team believing such bullsh*t will somehow mitigate negligent or questionable shootings. The reality is that all shootings are deemed as unjust by the public regardless of facts or circumstances. A heavy trigger as a stop gap for proper training tells me said department is more incompetent than those who don't mandate heavy triggers.
So lets recap for all the uneducated in this thread as there seems to be plenty.
Glock pistols have THREE PASSIVE SAFETIES, ALL OF WHICH DO NOT REQUIRE YOUR COGNITIVE INPUT TO ACTIVATE OR DEACTIVATE. The "Glock advantage" is more than just the absence of an obsolete manual/active safety. The low bore axis, the minimal parts count, the weight, the magazine capacity, the finish, the positive reset on the trigger and of course the cost are all huge advantages over other designs. Regardless, you people need to stop reading and believing bullsh*t marketing slogans. Evaluate a product for what it is and what YOU WANT TO DO WITH IT.
Some in this thread get it, most don't...
You called sir, I answered.
TDC
If that's the case then there's no way to make an argument that under the stress of a gunfight you won't shoot yourself on account of the lack of an external safety on the glock. Nor would there be any way to predict your ability to make hits, which is a far more difficult task. If you can't trust yourself to engage the gun with a grip that will take the safety off, you can't trust yourself to do any of the subsequent and more difficult tasks, so give up now.
Besides which, of course, when you shoot a 1911 your thumb should be riding on top of the safety, making it very difficult to get wrong.
Trained drivers perform emergency maneuvers well mid-crash on a fairly regular basis.
Trained pilots do the same.
Repetition and training will allow people to repeat actions under stress that they can perform relaxed. HOWEVER, pilots, who train vastly more than 99.9% of shooters, still do things wrong on occasion. Obviously the things they do wrong tend not to be "grab the stick wrong" which would be the equivalent of grabbing a 1911 so poorly you can't get the safety off, but they do check the wrong gauge or make the wrong correction and crash once in a while.
That is why I like manual safeties. You can train enough to perform the basic tasks correctly every time - tasks like gripping the gun. You can't train enough to know that you will NEVER make a mistake. For this reason I like a bit of a margin of error. Is it manageable to do without? Yes. Would I rather have the option? If I could, yes, I would.
Oh, come on now. What does a double action trigger do? It cocks the firing mechanism, and then releases it at full ####. What does the Glock trigger do? It fully cocks the partially cocked striker, and then releases it at full ####. Claiming that the feel of pulling the trigger makes the mechanism something inherently different "in real life" is like saying that an AR-15 with a Geissele 2-stage trigger is an inherently different firearm than the same AR-15 with a milspec single stage.
so a double action Sig is the same a double action Glock, at least,
According to you.
Since you don't mention which SIG or Glock you're referring to, I'll use common examples of each for comparison; the P226 DAK in 9mm, and the G17 GEN4 in the same caliber.
The trigger mechanism is fundamentally the same, if that's what you're referring to. One cocks a partially pre-cocked striker, the other cocks a hammer. The operating system is very similar as well; both pistols use a tilting barrel linkless cam short recoil system. Both pistols feature a passive firing pin block safety, and both feature other individual passive safeties.
Functionally, they operate nearly identically. Are they the same? No. Do they do the same job in much the same way? Yes. Some specifics would help to answer the question, should this not be the response you're looking for.
Perfect.
If the Glock is as easy to shoot as DAK trigger...
Minus the nastiness, All of this is true. lol
This guys explains it pretty good.[/B]



























