I've switched my USPSA gun to a Tanfo Stock Master this year, and I find it points extremely close to a Glock, to the point I can go back and forth between the two with no issues.
I still believe the Glock is the ultimate overall pistol system. What do I know though? they’re all I’ve shot for 25 years.
A CZ Shadow 2 Compact and a Staccato C2 will eventually be in my stable… but I’m in no hurry for them. I’ll always carry Glocks though.
Aaron D.
EvoSec
Evolution Security Podcast
Production for now. I'm all in on production for the next couple years trying to earn a world shoot slot.
For IPSC rules, which prevent me from doing almost any of the mods I make for my USPSA production Glocks, including being unable to swap out recoil springs, I think the Tanfo is a slightly better gun to play the game with. Comparing the Tanfo to my USPSA production Glocks with a brass grip plug, tungsten guide rod, reduced recoil spring, I think there is no difference. The Tanfo may be slightly more forgiving on a tougher shots, but the Glock is much easier to reload quickly without hanging up the reload and is faster for me on close hoser stages.
My first handgun was an early gen 4 G17 that I bought on my birthday. My first duty gun was a G22. I shot Glocks almost exclusively (aside from when they didn't have a gun at that time that met a need i.e small slim 9mms) for the first 10 years of my handgun carrying life.
Fast forward to 2019 and I moved states to an agency that issues the M&P 2.0. I shot it fine, but I preferred the Glock simply because even though the m&p had less felt recoil, I could manage that recoil better with the Glock and time between shots was lower. Not an astronomical difference, but enough that I could tell even without a timer.
Then I injured my wrist in a fight during a felony warrant service. Since then, Glocks have been uncomfortable to downright painful to shoot.
So now, even though I'm out of LE and can carry whatever I want, I've switched entirely to the m&p due to aforementioned wrist pain with Glocks. I'll probably need surgery when whatever my wrist issue is deteriorates further. But for now, "I can't shoot the handgun I want" isn't a good enough reason for a doctor to sign off on treatment/surgery and for insurance to pay for it.
I will say that before the injury I had no problem switching back and forth with 5 minutes of dry-fire practice.
Not quite the same thing, but I went round and round with my ophthalmologist for coupla-three years about my cataracts. He knew I had them. I told him repeatedly at each office visit, "I can't see! I can't see!" My wife suggested to tell him that it was impacting the quality of my life.
BOOM!
Two weeks later, I was getting cataract surgery.
He's not a Doc to push surgery and is very conservative about such matters, which I like. But those were the magic words.
PS For anyone reading this, if the time comes to get those cataracts taken care of, do so! Best thing I've ever done for my eyesight and the surgery is a comparative cakewalk.
In a sort of ghastly simplicity we remove the organ and demand the function. We make men without chests and expect of them virtue and enterprise. We laugh at honour and are shocked to find traitors in our midst. We castrate and bid the geldings be fruitful.” ― C.S. Lewis, The Abolition of Man
I have a really non-scientific theory I've held a long time regarding the Glock grip angle.
It felt natural to me from the beginning, and Glocks have always pointed well to me. Other people I shoot with, not so much. If I ask people in person who say they hate the Glock grip angle to demonstrate a punch, their wrist is locked at an angle similar to the 1911. If you ask me to demonstrate a punch, I line up my front two knuckles in line with the bone structure in my arm from many years of Shotokan karate training. My punch looks like the Glock grip angle. I'm obviously in the vast minority, but it is an interesting observation.