I have mentioned this before, but I think it needs repeating. Shooting a pistol with a given load or brand of ammo does not necessarily tell you how good it is.
It take a new pistol and shoot loads from Start to Max in it, to see what it likes.
Today I shot two new pistols, a Canik T-120 (CZ75 clone) and a Zastvia M70a (TT-33 clone in 9mm).
The Canik shot everything well, with little difference. I will repeat the test at rapid fire and see if there is a difference.
But the Zastvia showed a more normal spread in groups, with one load clearly better than the others.

So give your pistol a chance. Find out what it likes. The ammo you are now using might be the worst choice. I have 20+ 9mms and can say that the ammo preference of each is individual. It is not as simple that Glock is best with A and CZ is best with B and M&P is best with C.
It take a new pistol and shoot loads from Start to Max in it, to see what it likes.
Today I shot two new pistols, a Canik T-120 (CZ75 clone) and a Zastvia M70a (TT-33 clone in 9mm).
The Canik shot everything well, with little difference. I will repeat the test at rapid fire and see if there is a difference.
But the Zastvia showed a more normal spread in groups, with one load clearly better than the others.

So give your pistol a chance. Find out what it likes. The ammo you are now using might be the worst choice. I have 20+ 9mms and can say that the ammo preference of each is individual. It is not as simple that Glock is best with A and CZ is best with B and M&P is best with C.


















































