Agreed. Even if I had the choice and ability to buy something else, I'm not sure I would at this point. The modularity allows me to run a tailored setup for IDPA, IPSC and regular old plinking. With our current regulations, this allows me to have three different pistols with one registration certificate. Brilliant.I have tens of thousands of rounds through them, I can't say I've had issues other than a handload round caused issue.
Langton tactical (makes a lot of after market parts for the Beretta 92 series as well as collaborations with Beretta, kind of like Wilson Combat) says a Beretta 92 series handgun should last at the very least 50,000 rounds before any major failure. Even Beretta themselves say that it should be good for 35,000 rounds at the very least, and it should be able to make it 17,500 rounds without any sort of jams or stoppages. There are also numerous sources that prove a Beretta 92fs can last over 100'000 rounds. Come back when your Sikh Saar makes it even just to the 35'000 round mark without blowing your femur in half.I haven't had a single problem with my P320 and at like 2000 rnds almost not even a single stoppage
Langton tactical (makes a lot of after market parts for the Beretta 92 series as well as collaborations with Beretta, kind of like Wilson Combat) says a Beretta 92 series handgun should last at the very least 50,000 rounds before any major failure. Even Beretta themselves say that it should be good for 35,000 rounds at the very least, and it should be able to make it 17,500 rounds without any sort of jams or stoppages. There are also numerous sources that prove a Beretta 92fs can last over 100'000 rounds. Come back when your Sikh Saar makes it even just to the 35'000 round mark without blowing your femur in half.
I have tens of thousands of rounds through them, I can't say I've had issues other than a handload round caused issue.
Exactly. Even the much loved AR was reviled at first, into the 80s some people still brought up old stories of how they jammed so easily or how they couldn't stabilize heavier bullets. All thing addressed and fixed earlier, but never forgotten. Point is, a lot of excellent firearms needed some tweaks before becoming legend.No doubt it had some teething problems in the beginning which were addressed with the recall, but good god, with the amount of testing that was done to pass the various armed forces trials, this issue of spontaneous firing P320s has been blown way out of proportion.
Anyone remember the early days of Glock. They actually had nicknames for all the early incidents. “Glock Leg” and “Racing Stripe” scars. People no longer think of it as being unsafe. On the contrary.
For the guy who was pimping the 92FS earlier… slide separations at the ejection port on the early military contract models sending working parts rearward. Issue was addressed and now everyone remembers it as a solid gun.
####ing cancel culture seems to run rampant in the firearms community as well apparently.