Oh look, a dead horse! Where’s my sledgehammer?
It’s not so much a dislike of the P320 as it is Sig’s questionable QC across their entire line-up these days. The Dropgate issue chapped the assets of many because Sig’s response was basically dismissive of the safety issue in the P320 not being completely drop-safe. That, and they apparently had some inkling of the issue before the public blew-up about the problem.
Nobody is denying other manufacturers have goofed up at some point. Gen 4 Glocks had brass-to-face issues, the 17M started self-disassembling in holsters, the M&P in 9mm suffered some accuracy issues, the list goes on. They’re building a device that helps contain a small explosion that launches a projectile, shit happens. The issue was Sig’s lack-luster response, coupled with their QC having been on the decline for some time.
Personally I like the P320 from a design stand point. The modularity aspect is cool plus the gun is aesthetically appealing. I bought one of the first P320 Compacts to come out, back when it was still considered the Carry size. I liked it well enough, minus my take-down lever getting insanely hot after 15 rounds but a trip back to the factory fixed that. I just like hammer-fired guns more.
If I had a reasonable amount of assurance I could pick up any P320 out of my LGS and it work as great as the current offerings from the competition I’d be all over it. I like Sig, my first pistol was a Sig so I tend to gravitate to their stuff. But recent postings by members in any of the P320 threads shows some significant variety in QC from pistol to pistol even in recently produced models.
I can’t find the posts right now, but I recall an LE member here having to send their gun back to Sig recently.
“Conspiracy theories are just spoiler alerts these days.”
The popularity here or lack thereof is the direct result on how SIG handled the 'recall' (gasp! Voluntary Upgrade). Personally, I've been running the P320 for going on four years without issue. My department has also adopted the P320 last December along with the local Sheriff's Office. Not to mention, the Ohio State Patrol has also adopted the P320 so in my realm, it's all P320.
Mentioning our recent upgrade, to date, the P320 has already outperformed our previous P30 V1's in both function and officer's ability to perform well with them.
From what I can tell, it appears the manual safety prevents the trigger bar and trigger from moving, in addition is pushes it down off the sear. If the trigger can't move, then it also can't push up on the striker safety lock. With a manual safety you'd have to defeat the spring tension in both the sear, and the striker safety lock to get the gun to fire.
The original drop safety problem with the P320 was that the trigger itself was too heavy and had enough potential energy when dropped to pull itself.
I'm so cheap I took all the shot up targets from Gabe White's class. Brown tape is cheaper than targets though...
I like them. My Sig P320 X-Five, X-Carry, and Sub Compact are in the 10 best striker-fired guns in my collection.
Ignoring Sig’s recent history of shoddy QC and their incredibly poor response to the revelation that the guns might fire when you drop them, the P320 just doesn’t do anything better than any of the other popular striker guns. For example, I’m already set up to run Glocks with guns, backup guns, guns of different sizes, holsters, boxes of spare magazines, mag pouches, spare parts, the knowledge of how to detail strip and maintain the gun. For another generic striker fired gun to unseat Glocks for me, I would have to shoot it so much better than the Glock that it’s not even a contest. Plus, I’m just not as comfortable carrying fully cocked striker guns without manual safeties or some kind of gadget like device. It takes a lot of money and effort to get set up for another gun. I’m not going to go through that to replace Glock with a gun that doesn’t offer me anything better than what Glock does.
My posts only represent my personal opinion and do not necessarily reflect the opinions or official policies of any employer, past or present. Obvious spelling errors are likely the result of an iPhone keyboard.
Just to pile on:
I like the Glock because with an SCD I can control the striker positively while holstering.
If someone has their heart set on a fully cocked striker design, I recommend:
HK VP9
M&P
Walther PPQ
In that order.
I shoot the VP9 marginally better than a Glock, maybe, but the lack of striker control while holstering leads to slight trepidation every time I holster. Probably a good thing, but the Glock is just less drama.
I never recommend the P320 due to all the issues in the OP, and I don’t feel it offers anything the others listed above don’t. Plus screw Sig for how they managed all of this.
I’ve shot around 50000 rounds through p320s and p320c’s. In my hands, they are marginally better than Glocks, and mine have been very reliable. I could be happy shooting and carrying them.
However, after my switch to CZ hammer fired pistols, I sold my carry 320s, and don’t use my competition 320s.
And, I prefer Glock to Sig for defensive use.
The VP9 is solid, and the P10 looks promising.
I do not like M&Ps, and wouldn’t choose Walther for carry.
Last edited by Clusterfrack; 04-22-2019 at 01:05 PM.
“There is no growth in the comfort zone.”--Jocko Willink
"You can never have too many knives." --Joe Ambercrombie
I preferred the P320 because I shot P320 and PPQ a little better than their competitors (however, this was prior to the release of Glock's generation 5 and the CZ). At the time I only had one auto loading pistol (S&W Shield which for my money is not a beginner pistol). I stuck with the Shield until I was finally able hit the target on a regular basis and that believe me that required discipline and extensive practice! My dominate hand was very uncomfortable with the finger grooves on the Glock and for that reason I eliminated the Glock 19. At any rate, I selected the P320 over the PPQ because for me I felt the PPQ out of the box trigger was too light for an EDC handgun. Additionally, I liked the ergonomics of the P320 and its modularity. Yet all the auto loading handguns that I compared were high quality and with the exception of those finger grooves on the Glock I believe I would not have been disappointed with any of the handguns. Despite becoming a Sig P320 fanboy, I still recommend renting and shooting as many of the top handguns and then to select the handgun that shoots the best and is the most comfortable. Frankly, I believe the Glock is a great auto loading handgun. It has an impeccable history for reliability - it just that those finger grooves didn't work for me (others may have felt the same way and perhaps that is the reason that the Generation 5 does not have finger grooves - quien sabes).
Last edited by LockedBreech; 04-24-2019 at 03:22 PM.
State Government Attorney | Beretta, Glock, CZ & S&W Fan