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Maj Robert Thornton
3
3
0
Good article. After years of trying to hit the broad side of a barn with 1911's, a friend convinced me to try a Glock 30. I went to the range and rented one. Only 2 fliers in 50 rounds. I ended up purchasing a Glock 30 s. My first 3 rounds at 21 ft I could cover with a quarter. It is my everyday carry now.
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MSgt George Cater
3
3
0
Maybe after I wear out my Sig and have an operation to modify my hand to that dopey grip angle.
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SSG Tom Pike
SSG Tom Pike
6 y
The grip angle is just a matter of shooting it enough to get used to. Once you have shot Glocks for a while they point very naturally and other guns feel wrong.
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SMSgt Thor Merich
2
2
0
Interesting article. Around 1990-1991, my Dept switched to the Glock 22 (.40 S&W). I was carrying a S&W .45 ACP at the time. I ended up carrying the 22/23 for most of my career. Great duty weapon.

It’s interesting that Glock pushed the .45 ACP towards the military/LE market. Because many civilian LE departments chose the .40 S&W over the .45 ACP. The .40 had a 180 grain bullet verse the 185 grain bullet we carried in the .45 ACP. Both rounds have Similar ballistics, but the .40 gave you more ammo.
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TSgt David L.
TSgt David L.
6 y
I have the 22 .40. I have 3 other pistols in .40 as well for the days I don't carry my 1911, and one (M&P Shield) as my back-up gun. The advantage being double stack (more ammo as you said) and less weight than my Commander primary weapon.
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SMSgt Thor Merich
SMSgt Thor Merich
6 y
TSgt David L. - My daily carry now is Colt Combat Commander. It shoot like a dream, but only holds 8 rounds. But since I am less worried about getting into a gun fight nowadays, I don't mind having less ammo.
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TSgt David L.
TSgt David L.
6 y
SMSgt Thor Merich - I always have extra mags, and to paraphrase COL Jeff Cooper, if 7 rounds of .45 doesn't work you're in trouble anyway.
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