Michael@massmeans.com | Zeleny@post.harvard.edu | westcoastguns@gmail.com | larvatus prodeo @ livejournal | +1-323-363-1860 | “If at first you don’t succeed, keep on sucking till you do succeed.” — Curly Howard, 1936 | “All of old. Nothing else ever. Ever tried. Ever failed. No matter. Try again. Fail again. Fail better.” — Samuel Beckett, 1984
If this thing heats up like a P7, it would be a no-go for me. I couldn't go for more than a box of rapid fire without having to put gloves on.
@JCN: shoot 10 bill drills back to back and let us know, eh?
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Sure if you pay for the ammo!
Honestly, if it wound up being a heating issue I’d do like I do for suppressors (or any of my thin barrel rifles) and just have some water as a heat sink.
For matches with 30 rounds of shooting and then 30 min of waiting... I don’t see this being a real issue.
There is a European shooter on PSTG who has been shooting one of these in IPSC for a while now and reportedly it's not a big deal. He has a cheap battery powered fan he uses when he wants to have a high round count training session.
Thnx. I don't keep the subscription over winter months, it is usually very stagnant there. Gonna be keeping an eye on this still. I am sure not an issue for the matches but practice is where things get hot. This summer I was getting my Shadows hot enough to feel it a bit.
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I am not versed in powders at all; my experience has been that this was all about pace and rate of fire. I am probably more attuned to this subject than most because P7M8 was my first handgun. Based on my memories of it, I would probably need four to support the type of practice sessions I did this last summer with one Shadow.
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The heat thing seems like it would be able to be reduced with various thermal coatings or a thermal barrier between the chamber area and the frame. These work pretty significantly in the automotive world. I am a little surprised if it is as significant as the P7 as it is the barrel closest to the trigger area rather than the gas block chamber but then itmay be about the same. The Walther CCP which uses the same gas block/barrel layout as the P7 except a polymer frame doesn't seem to have many complaints about temps getting too hot. I wonder how much is transfer from metal to metal vs metal to polymer?
To the OP thanks for sharing your experience with an awesome pistol. I'm always excited to see companies and designers try new things in the gun world.