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ST911
10-01-2014, 07:13 PM
Quick review – Taurus 709 9mm
http://www.taurususa.com/product-details.cfm?id=588&category=Pistol&toggle=tp&breadcrumbseries=700

Manufacturer: Taurus
Model: 709FS “Slim” (sku 1-709031FS)
Serial number: TPH#####
MSRP: $403.98

During August and September I had a sample Taurus 709 in 9mm on loan to me for evaluation. The gun was received and returned without any consideration and all other supplies were my own. The 709 is a subcompact, single-stack 9mm that competes with the S&W Shield, Springfield XDs, and other compact single stacks.

L/R View

http://i76.photobucket.com/albums/j18/Skintop911/Taurus%20709/IMG_1201.jpg

http://i76.photobucket.com/albums/j18/Skintop911/Taurus%20709/IMG_1203.jpg

http://i76.photobucket.com/albums/j18/Skintop911/Taurus%20709/IMG_1200.jpg

Fieldstripped View

The 709 fieldstrips much like a Glock via a slide retention bar. There are five basic components, slide, barrel, receiver, magazine, and captured dual recoil spring assembly.

http://i76.photobucket.com/albums/j18/Skintop911/Taurus%20709/IMG_1223.jpg

http://i76.photobucket.com/albums/j18/Skintop911/Taurus%20709/IMG_1208.jpg

http://i76.photobucket.com/albums/j18/Skintop911/Taurus%20709/IMG_1217.jpg

Ammunition capacity in the 9mm is 7+1, making the 709 a one- or two- bad guy gun. This is on par with others in its class. The case is nearly fully supported and the edges of the chamber are chamfered.

http://i76.photobucket.com/albums/j18/Skintop911/Taurus%20709/IMG_1210.jpg

I shot an initial group at 25yds which printed 5” low, about 5” in diameter, and correct for windage. I adjusted the sights and got it to shoot it POA/POI at 10, 15, and 25yds. Do note the sight adjustment is two screws on the right side of the rear sight. Elevation is adjusted by the rear screw, windage the front. The screw at the top of the read sight is NOT an adjustment screw.

The sights on this gun are a basic 3-dot design and non-luminous. They're lower in profile and the rear notch is narrow but they are usable. By the end of my use, some of the white paint in one of the rear dots was coming off

http://i76.photobucket.com/albums/j18/Skintop911/Taurus%20709/IMG_1207.jpg

The best target for this gun at 25yds was a 73-1X with some FMJ. Five are strongly grouped, three opened it up a bit, and two went off paper. The group validates the sight adjustment made. The two off paper are my fault. Even with that group, the Taurus compares favorably to others of its class. In fact, I was pretty pleased with the five in the black.

Comparisons with other popular compacts and subcompacts, 10rds at 25yds:
Glock 26 9mm 94-2X
Shield 9mm (2) 85-1X
SAI XDx 9mm 84-0X
M&P 9C 9mm 79-2X
Ruger LCP 9mm 76-0X
Kahr PM9 9mm 76-0X
Taurus 709 9mm 73-1X
Shield 9mm (1) 63-0X
Sigarms P290 9mm 53-3X
Karh Mk9 9mm 36-0X

The 709 target

http://i76.photobucket.com/albums/j18/Skintop911/Taurus%20709/IMG_1224.jpg

I shot three loads from Black Hills Ammo. They were the 115gr TAC-XP, 124gr JHP-XTP +P, and a 50rd box of 115 FMJ. I also fired a 50rd box each of Freedom Munitions 115gr FMJ (reman) and Speer Lawman 147gr TMJ. Function was 100% with the TAC-XP and XTP carry loads. I had 5 stovepipes with the FMJ. Shooting through the Freedom and Speer the gun continued having occasional stovepipes at a rate of about 5 per box or so.

The trigger is interesting. Racking the slide fully cocks the striker, producing long travel to a light single-action break. However, if you press the trigger in dry fire, the trigger is double action only and gives the gun a second-strike capability. Therefore, when carried with a loaded chamber the gun is a single action only. The trigger was a little tricky to run fast in 3-5rd responses but a dedicated user could train into it with practice.

The gun includes a manual safety lever on the left side of the gun that is large enough to be usable. The light, single action trigger would seem to require it. It is not reversible, so a southpaw will have to adapt. The safety is also large enough that it cut the inside of my thumb near the web within a few rounds. A bit of hockey tape in the range bag prevented further injury. Smaller hands may help a bit, but I bet some others with even average hands will experience the issue to a degree. Another grip technique might also mitigate the issue.

There is a trigger safety in the trigger limiting rearward travel that's similar but not identical to the Glock. Testing that safety, I put a finger on either side of the trigger and pressed to the rear. A little extra effort at the point of resistance defeated the safety. The gun also incorporates an internal firing pin safety similar to the Glock and appears to work in the same way.

http://i76.photobucket.com/albums/j18/Skintop911/Taurus%20709/IMG_1204.jpg

Summary

Two shooters fired ~200 rounds through the sample and shared all pertinent observations. Lightweight, size efficient, and inexpensive, the 709 meets a need. The gun was reliable with the small quantity of carry ammo tested, but not with any of the three practice loads used. If used as a primary CCW, more detailed reliability checks with chosen ammo are prudent. The gun was easy to shoot for accuracy at distance, shot to POA, and grouped respectably for its class. Minor finish wear on high points of the gun was evident at the conclusion of the evaluation.

Lomshek
10-02-2014, 12:20 AM
My sister in law has one she carries and is overall happy with it. She has about 300 rounds through it. I'm trying to convince her to shoot a USPSA match with it but she likes how much easier her PPQ is to shoot ("I know" I say "but the Taurus is the one you'll be shooting if bad things happen.")

My biggest complaint is the poorly cut/ground sear. The edge that engages the striker is not square and leads to inconsistent trigger pulls depending on which part of the sear edge engages the striker. I'm tempted to pull it out and square it up. That poor QC concerns me as it speaks to how (not) careful Taurus is.