I own a Kriss Vector, MPX, and Scorpion Evo 3 all in 9mm. They are all a tone a fun to shoot and I compete in local PCC matches with them.The purpose would be fun, potentially have something to compete with,
The MPX is the most easily concealed and carried in a back pack. I added a Timney trigger as the stock is not so great. Magazines are great quality (I think Lancer makes them) but expensive. The rails is great and I found it easy to setup with small light. The manual of arms carries right over from the AR.
The Scorpion is Glock simple. A little rougher to shoot thanks to the massive unstoppable bolt. It's form factor is much larger than the MPX.
The Kriss is Glock mag compatible and real smooth easy to shoot gun. Stock trigger is good. I added a SB Tactical brace. I've had FTEs problems with it with 115 ammo. 147 runs great. The ejection port in tinny so when you get FTEs it's a pain.
All three work great with a Silencer Omega 9k.
Last edited by underhook; 06-24-2018 at 08:39 PM.
I need to try that Timney trigger for the MPX. I have been very lucky and caught MPX Gen 1 mags on sale much cheaper than the normal retail - I grab MPX mags whenever I see them on sale. I have added some 20 round mags for "reloads" and when the MPX is in a backpack or such where the 30 rd mags are problematic.
In order of reliability and shear fun, I recommend the following:
Z5P or Z5RS. Built on HK licensed machinery by HK trained techs, they’re about as close as you can come to a German MP5 without getting an SP5K
Sig MPX Gen 2. Has been reliable both suppressed and unsuppessed for about 1000 rounds without cleaning
Scorpion Evo 3. Needs about $400 of aftermarket parts to bring it into compliance and up to speed with the MPX, IMHO
I also have a KRISS Vector with brace. While it is more of a novelty gun, mine has been reliable and it does feed from Glock mags.
Last edited by Sensei; 06-25-2018 at 05:32 AM.
I like my rifles like my women - short, light, fast, brown, and suppressed.
Everything I am seeing on the Gen 2 MCX is in the $1999 range, if even available, seems they are the one to get in terms of reliability vs. the gen 1. Might have to bit the bullet on this one. Seems to check all the boxes, and the modularity is certainly a plus.