What gun game would these even be legal for? You'd get stomped on in Open with a Glock.
From my Motorola StarTAC.
What gun game would these even be legal for? You'd get stomped on in Open with a Glock.
From my Motorola StarTAC.
Thinking about this, I can see benefits to the 35, even with an optic, as the 35 handles .40 better. I have also not heard much chatter of G35 problems with .40, unlike in the shorter barrel length models.
Likes pretty much everything in every caliber.
I think this is very timely as there are a wave of aging shooters with aging eyes who struggle to see iron sights. I wear mono vision contacts so that I can see the sights and the targets with my 54 year old eyes - if I had a "dot", I might not need the special contact prescription.
I think it interesting how "racy" equipment from USPSA Open has slowly but surely become part of service and carry firearms such as the optics.
As a long time G35 user ( March 05 to date/22k rounds over 2 pistols /20k and 2 k), I am extremely intrigued with a factory backed G34/35/41 optic ready pistol. The gen 4 was not enough of a change to bump me off my braces of G34s and G35s. This development might very well.
While a factory ready optics slide is good, I think the real opportunity is in optics. Making the optic more reliable, resistant to weather, and most importantly -- a display that allows the shooter to acquire the dot easier and plain shoot better.
Likes pretty much everything in every caliber.
Isn't Glock just trying to keep the cost down? Don't most of us prefer to replace most stock pistol sights with our favorite brand and type of sights?
Not wanting to pay more for something I'm probably going to take off anyway, I like the way Glock does it, with cheap "dovetail protectors" (as KH puts it).
--Josh
“Formerly we suffered from crimes; now we suffer from laws.” - Tacitus.