Nooooooooooooooooooooo!!! You put a magazine full of hollow points into your gun, not a clip!![]()
clip...magazine....the damn thing holds 11 rounds...that should be enough stopping power...lmao
Glock for home protection. 1911 if you get into guns after owning one for awhile.
Bruzilla I got faith in it...p226 is a nice weapon indeed...
I recommend them to all new shooters. Both of my daughters carry them. I think you here of more accidents because they out number other guns carried by a huge margin. They are stone cold reliable and if the person is trained properly very safe. I don't think they are anymore dangerous than any others it just comes down to basic gun safety. Just my 2 cents. I own or have owned most or all of the guns mentioned in this thread and they are all good choices.Damn! I knew a Glock guy would show up sooner or later.Letting Glocks into a discussion like this always opens a can of worms. Glocks are nice pistols, they are affordable which makes them popular, but their design is inherently dangerous. More non-intentional discharges of weapons occur with Glocks than all other weapons combined each year.
The problem with Glocks is their trigger safety. It's an ingenious design, and amazingly simple, but the reality is that no matter how much training a person has, there will be times they won't follow it, pick up the pistol, and put their finger on the trigger. Once that happens, the pull is light enough that lots of Glock owners, including lots of well-trained cops, end up putting holes where they never wanted to put any, like in their walls, floors, furniture, and feet.
I like Glocks, I have Glocks, but I would never recommend one to a new shooter.
I recommend them to all new shooters. Both of my daughters carry them. I think you here of more accidents because they out number other guns carried by a huge margin. They are stone cold reliable and if the person is trained properly very safe. I don't think they are anymore dangerous than any others it just comes down to basic gun safety. Just my 2 cents. I own or have owned most or all of the guns mentioned in this thread and they are all good choices.
I own two Glocks and both stay chambered. If you learn to keep your finger off the trigger when picked up (pick them up with your index finger straight...should do that with any weapon) and pay attention to what you are doing, there shouldn't be a problem. If you have a problem with your attention span, then maybe a Glock isn't for you. My wife is one of those people that takes her focus off of what she's doing before the 'movement' is completed. IE, if she puts something on the counter, her eyes are already moving to something else before the object is fully turned loose and is safely on the counter. She's forever handing me things and starts to move her eyes away before making sure I fully have control of the object she's handing to me. This has cause many broken items over the years and I now carry her model 21 and she carries something with a physical safety on it. I feel that taking the safety off is quicker than having to chamber a round and I feel safer around her lol.
I noticed one thing missing from most of these posts. Please consider where the gun(s) will be stored/kept in the house when nobody is home. The usual places like night stand, closet, etc. are often checked by burglars, and the last thing that any of us need is more guns in the hands of criminals.