Any legal information I may post is general information, and is not legal advice. Such information may or may not apply to your specific situation. I am not your attorney unless an attorney-client relationship is separately and privately established.
I’m learning more about myself as I read this thread. When Dagga Boy posts about a new revolver purchase you can feel the passion he has for nice revolvers oozing out of the screen. I have NEVER felt that way about any platform of handguns I’ve owned. I’ve owned my fair share of Glocks, especially 19s. My problem is I have zero emotional attachment toward pistols. I’ve never regretted selling one.... easy come easy go. So I guess I’m looking for that and that’s why I’m a revolving door of pistol ownership.
I WANT to settle down and quit selling guns. Just haven’t had the willpower or desire to do that yet.
I’m larger than the average bear, so P-09, PX4C, j-frame.
David S.
For me, I would pick the Berettas, but I like DA autos and am not a Glock fan. That said, and something I rarely say, you should get a Glock. Or as suggested above,at least a similar striker-fired gun (I am partial to the M&P 2.0 over a Glock or P320 as far as that type of gun goes).
There is a lot to be said for using one "type" of gun so I would advocate something that has the same operational characteristics (short travel trigger around 6 lbs, no safeties or decockers).
It’s mentally healthy to not be emotionally attached to a physical object. If you see them as tools, appliances, commodities, then get the tools you need and don’t worry about the rest of it. It isn’t required that you engage these things the same way anyone else does.
Even as someone who does emotionally attach to some degree (I think they're fun and I enjoy having them around) they're still tools at the end of the day. Any time I read a post where someone is like "I could never get a Wilson or other fancy gun, what if I had to drop it in training or my sweat smudged the finish carrying?!" and it just battles me that anyone would be concerned with things that petty if a tool was the best tool for the job.
I think one of the most beautiful sights is a really high end gun that has clearly been a little dinged up over years of range time.
State Government Attorney | Beretta, Glock, CZ & S&W Fan
I'll always have a desire to own virtually every decent gun ever made and at some point it seems that I have , but in the past year or so I've kind of taken the approach you describe and have minimalized down to 3 pistols. 2 G17.5 w/DDPs for competition/training and a G45 I carry daily with Holosun.
The main thing I've learned is that the Gen 5 Glocks do essentially everything I need in a gun. Very accurate, very reliable, trigger that is more than adequate, etc. I know that if I want to lower my splits, I should train more. If I want to do better in a match? Train more. Improve my accuracy? Train more. Viewing my guns as tools make it all about dry fire/shooting/training vs. Spending a bunch of cash on the next new hotness as a way to lower my splits by .02 or improve my match placement by 1 spot.
I felt that way until I bought myself a Dan Wesson Valor as a divorce present to myself. It went back to the mothership and got practically every box ticked on the custom shop list. I use the snot out of it, and will no longer carry it. The emotional attachment is what did it - I really don't care about any other gun except my 10/22 (first one I bought, ever).
Last edited by jeep45238; 04-07-2020 at 10:37 PM.