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.
I was going off the OP which said the gun was entered in the Bavarian State Police contract trials. A contract for 8,000 pistols is not small either but it’s definitely a different league than over 30k. Only a handful of US LE agencies have over 8,000 armed personnel. Off the top of my head I can think of CBP, ICE, and the FBI on the federal side and NYPD, Chicago PD, LAPD, and LASD on the state/county/local side.
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.
I don't know who mentioned the Bavaria State Police, maybe someone up thread. But that is incorrect. The Glock 46 TR won the tender to arm the Sachsen-Anhalt police force, which is significantly smaller than its Bavarian counterpart. A contract for approx 6400 units was awarded.
The post that started this thread by @Luger mentioned the G46 was entered in the Bavaria State Police trials. From that post it read to me that he’s an officer with that agency. I don’t know anything about who may have won that contract but if you were handing out a contract for over 33k pistols, Glock would probably make anything you asked for within reason.
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.
On the commercial side, Glocks has done special editions for distributors with as few as 5,000.
Another potential aspect is that while gun companies exist to make money not guns there are products that are introduced simply due to “grudges.” Industry drama is a thing.
This can range from things like requirements that exclude one’s normal products (like a contract requirement that prohibits pulling the trigger to disassemble the pistol), actual or perceived theft of intellectual property, actual or perceived bad faith in prior collaborative efforts, etc.
If guns are outlawed, only outlaws will have guns.
"Detached reflection cannot be demanded in the presence of an uplifted knife." - Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, Brown v. United States, 256 U.S. 335 (1921)