archerynut
Platinum Member
For ammo I also have had good luck with Federal (Hydrashocks I think) for personal defense. For target shoooting I use the cheaper brands like Magtech.
That confuses me. The manual tells you that you should point the gun in a safe direction and pull the trigger as part of its cleaning procedure? So how to you decock the Glock? By pulling the trigger?RoyJackson said:The trigger has to be "decocked" to remove the slide. I can't think of any handgun that can be disassembled when cocked. As the Glock doesn't have an external hammer, the trigger does need to be pulled.
The Glock manual state to check the chamber...check again, then point the gun in a safe direction and pull the trigger.
If the gun isn't cocked...no, you do not have to pull the trigger for disassembly.
As far as I'm concerned this is just bad design. What good does an empty magazine do sitting in the pistol AFTER I HIT THE magazine release. So you are in a fire fight, your need a magazine change, you hit the release, and the mag sits there. So then you have to reach up, pull out the magazine, reach back down to get a full magazine, insert same and NOW you are good to go. That stuck mag just cost some very precious time. It may have gotten me killed. An empty magazine needs to be in the air or on the ground not stuck in a pistol.RoyJackson said:As far as the magazine "sticking", this is actually in the design of the older magazines. The European's preferred the magazine to be retained by the gun when empty (one can control the mag then). Any older Glock will do this (such as my old GLock 17). New style magazines drop free.
So, this wasn't a defect...just part of the gun's design (due to what the Customer's expected).
Glock customers in Europe disagreed. They thought it was a good design.dmccarty said:As far as I'm concerned this is just bad design.
Maybe they were at the range target shooting more often than they were in fire fights and they didn't like the clip dropping on the ground. Who knows.dmccarty said:So you are in a fire fight...
Podunkadunk said:Also, don't let those anti-technology (laser) guys talk you out of a prospective purchase. The laser is awesome, aligned true and where the dot is, the bullet goes. I find that invaluable at night, in my home, when the possibility of an assailant or burglar having a gun to do me bodily harm, warrants me having faster target acquisition than he does. I'll take any tactical advantage I can get, and if the dot scares him off before I have to shoot...so be it, I don't want to have to kill anyone anyhow.
The analogy of not buying it until after you've fired 10k rounds is crazy. It's like telling a fighter pilot not to use missiles until he masters guns, or don't use RADAR because it's cheating...and on and on. I bet those same guys have scopes on their rifles too, what about those iron sights for the old schoolers. Gimme a break.
Colt 1911.I can't think of any handgun that can be disassembled when cocked.