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Thread: G19- still the standard?

  1. #161
    Quote Originally Posted by TikritTourist View Post
    The first time one takes apart a Sig P-series or Sig polymer or a Springfield XD, etc.. you will be reminded just how brilliant and simple the Glock design is.
    This is one of the things that sold me on the M&P. Only slightly more complicated with the separate trigger and sear arrangement, but equally robust, better ergos and easier to shoot for me, for me, manual safety, etc. My only negative is their optic ready system seems like a recipe for shearing screws in higher recoiling calibers.


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  2. #162
    Quote Originally Posted by Lunker View Post
    My only negative is their optic ready system seems like a recipe for shearing screws in higher recoiling calibers.
    I only have the one with an SRO, and even though it is 9mm I decided I would do a direct mill just to start with what I perceive to be the best and simples (and lowest) setup.

  3. #163
    This thread keeps popping up and happen to coincide with a recent trip to a remote area of the desert which prompted me to think about where I carry.

    As in geographical location not physical location on the body.

    I am lucky to live in an area that is surrounded by local mountains and deserts. A large mountain range begins about four hours north and extends into an adjoining state. I love to travel on remote roads and explore open spaces. This last weekend, I took the family out to the Death Valley area. We spent about 8 hours in the most remote part exploring mines and cabins. I have been reacquainting myself with Glock 26 (similar enough to the 19), so that is what I chose to carry on this particular trip. Normally, you would find me with my 19 or 17 when I am in the outdoors. I carried spare ammunition in my Glock 17 magazines that work in all three guns. Now where does all this go.

    I am very likely to be found in the mountains and the desert as much as the city. I feel much more comfortable with a gun built for heavy use in those places. Just like my vehicle, I want to take as many reasonable precautions to prevent breakdowns in remote areas. Thinking back to my previous post, that is why I like more durable guns. I like not having to switch guns if I am going out of town and from a practical standpoint, makes training much easier. As others have stated the simplicity of the Glock design makes repairs on the go a simple task. A small emergency parts kit can fix most things that break on Glocks.

    If I lived in the city exclusively and were never more than a handful of blocks away from my domicile (that would theoretically have additional parts, ammunition, and magazines) I don't think this would be as big of a consideration for me.

    Again, I am not knocking the new smaller, carry oriented guns, just highlighting that geographic location influences my thought process.

    Here is a pick from the Mengel Pass for perspective.

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  4. #164
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    Edit: I think maybe I misunderstood.

  5. #165
    Site Supporter Cool Breeze's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by WobblyPossum View Post
    Pretty informative article. Thanks. Just to quickly address one thing:



    The author is on the right track but the truth is actually even more restrictive than what’s described here. The only way a personally owned P320 is authorized at the referenced agency is if it’s one of a handful of specific SKUs that aren’t available for commercial sale at all to customers who aren’t employees of the agency. The guns are built to the specific agency contract spec. They have a certain serial number prefix to denote that. Guns that don’t have that SN prefix won’t be approved for duty use at all, regardless of whether or not they have the LE SKU on the box. There are two distributors who carry these guns so the only way to get one is to buy it from one of them after the buyer shows they’re an employee of the agency in question.
    "Smith & Wesson and Glock both have LE SKU’s. There is a lot more to those guns than a spare magazine. They come with better quality small parts, more attention in the assembly process, and more vetting prior to leaving the factory."


    That's an interesting article. I suspected that Sig did this but this is the first I am hearing Glock or S&W doing so. Has anyone else heard this regarding these two companies? The only thing I remember regarding Glock was that DLC coated internals for 19M but that was widely known. I would consider that more a parts upgrade than a qa/qc or manufacturing tolerance tightening (or even material difference) with those guns. I definitely did not hear anything regarding assembly and testing.

  6. #166
    Quote Originally Posted by Cool Breeze View Post
    "Smith & Wesson and Glock both have LE SKU’s. There is a lot more to those guns than a spare magazine. They come with better quality small parts, more attention in the assembly process, and more vetting prior to leaving the factory."


    That's an interesting article. I suspected that Sig did this but this is the first I am hearing Glock or S&W doing so. Has anyone else heard this regarding these two companies? The only thing I remember regarding Glock was that DLC coated internals for 19M but that was widely known. I would consider that more a parts upgrade than a qa/qc or manufacturing tolerance tightening (or even material difference) with those guns. I definitely did not hear anything regarding assembly and testing.
    From my understanding smith and glock do this too.

    Most gun manufacturers I think understand that msot guns sold have less than 500 rounds lifetime on them

  7. #167
    Site Supporter echo5charlie's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by G19Fan View Post
    From my understanding smith and glock do this too.

    Most gun manufacturers I think understand that msot guns sold have less than 500 rounds lifetime on them
    If Glock is paying more attention to the Blue Label guns as a whole then that is new OR something they recently started informing people about. I do specifically recall that in 2002 during my first Glock Armorers class that the instructor stated that all Glocks (then) went through the same QC. My last class in 2019 (and three in between) there was no mention that made it to my ears. I do have a Glock Operator course coming up in September, hopefully I will remember to ask the instructor to see if I can get clarification.
    "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)

  8. #168
    Quote Originally Posted by echo5charlie View Post
    ...the instructor stated that all Glocks (then) went through the same QC.
    Same Q.C. department. The prints, listed tolerances, tribal knowledge tolerances, what the inspectors are told to sign-off/ignore off versus be stiffs about, and labor are instructed to send forward may vary; any or all of them. I have yet to meet any factory floor that operated any differently with the possible exception of a small and highly specialized mill with customers who would not hesitate fly high level reps across the planet to sit in the owner's office all day, every day for a month if they got so much as a questionable delivery. And even that producer unofficially signed off lesser batches to customers they knew would buy it off when one of their grunts of engineers dropped the ball.

    It gets real funny when you step into a shop that also produces off-brand products. "It's the same as the name brand" is not, has never, and will never be true.

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