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Thread: Looking for a conceal and carry 9mm for a lefty

  1. #1
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    Pace, FLorida

    Looking for a conceal and carry 9mm for a lefty

    I'm a left hand shooter and a few years ago I purchased a Walter PPQ because this pistol allowed me to swap the clip release from one side to the other and the fact that the slide had releases on both sides as well that benefited me as a lefty. I love my PPQ but it seems a bit large and heavy for a conceal and carry weapon so I'm looking for some recommendations for a 9mm pistol that is smaller, lighter and has a smaller capacity clip then my PPQ but has a reversible clip release and slide release on both sides like my PPQ. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated. Thanks.

  2. #2
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    Quote Originally Posted by Moondoggy View Post
    I'm a left hand shooter and a few years ago I purchased a Walter PPQ because this pistol allowed me to swap the clip release from one side to the other and the fact that the slide had releases on both sides as well that benefited me as a lefty. I love my PPQ but it seems a bit large and heavy for a conceal and carry weapon so I'm looking for some recommendations for a 9mm pistol that is smaller, lighter and has a smaller capacity clip then my PPQ but has a reversible clip release and slide release on both sides like my PPQ. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated. Thanks.
    Almost everyone here knows more than me, but it sounds like a 5th gen Glock (possibly other generations) would suit you. The G19 is about the same size as your ppq, I think, so maybe the Glock 26 or 48.

  3. #3
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    Jun 2019
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    Unfortunately the 48 is single sided slide release.
    When I injured my right wrist and was shooting lefty, I converted a number of guns to left sided magazine releases. But there are very few guns with ambi slide releases.

    I found that if there was an extended slide release lever and I smoothed the engagement with a small file for easier release I could drop it pretty easily with my left trigger finger when I shifted the grip to drop the mag.

    Seemed to open up a number of additional gun choices for me.

  4. #4
    Quote Originally Posted by Moondoggy View Post
    I'm a left hand shooter and a few years ago I purchased a Walter PPQ because this pistol allowed me to swap the clip release from one side to the other and the fact that the slide had releases on both sides as well that benefited me as a lefty. I love my PPQ but it seems a bit large and heavy for a conceal and carry weapon so I'm looking for some recommendations for a 9mm pistol that is smaller, lighter and has a smaller capacity clip then my PPQ but has a reversible clip release and slide release on both sides like my PPQ. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated. Thanks.
    I am in no way a top tier shooter but I am a lefty as well.

    Have you looked at the VP9SK with the paddle release? It is a truly ambidextrous gun, slide release on both sides and mag release on both sides.

    Do you have to break your grip to release the mag with your thumb? I do, so I find using my pointer finger to drop the mag when the release is on the left side isn’t much different than breaking my grip to use my thumb when the release is on the right side. Even when I shoot my VP9 with ambi levers I use my pointer finger. It also makes it easier when I switch to a pistol that doesn’t have an ambi release since I am already use to using my pointer finger.

    Again, I’m not a top tier shooter, just a lefty with short thumbs.

  5. #5
    Sig P365 seems to meet your criteria

  6. #6
    Chasing the Horizon RJ's Avatar
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    Jan 2014
    Welcome to p-f from a fellow lefty.

    I've been learning here since 2014. I got a lot of feedback on options for a carry gun in my Training Journal. I got used to right handed features on guns a while ago; I don't think it has any effect on my shooting.

    Couple questions?

    How do you conceal carry the Walther now? What holster and belt do you use? You put a lot of emphasis on the magazine release being moved. How does it work out if you have to use a normal, right handed gun? Is it a complete no go due to your circumstances, or can you manage?

    Same for the slide release; I get that you prefer the slide release/lock on the other side. Is that to enable you to release the slide to charge a round? Or is that to lock the slide back as a first step in clearing the gun for a field strip? I ask because if you can get past these things (using your strong hand to eject the mag, slingshoting to rack the slide, and an over hand method to lock the slide back) you will open up more possibilities to include "all" guns, not just those that are lefty-friendly.


    Out of the guns I've personally owned and shot (a lot), in the search for the "Perfect" carry gun, I would suggest looking at:

    Glock 19 Gen 5
    Glock 43X
    Glock 48
    Sig Sauer P365
    Sig Sauer P365XL

    I did not have much luck with stubby double stack guns, for carry. The two I owned were a Glock 26 Gen 5 and an HK P30SK. I believe there are much better options for carry guns these days than these two, nowadays. One other gun that did not work well for me as a lefty in particular, was a Walther PPS M2. It was very heavy for the round capacity, and the non-reversible mag release meant It ejected the mag while I was carrying it, twice. No bueno for a lefty.

    Anyway, after 14 gun transactions over 7 years, I currently carry a Glock 48. It is reliable and accurate. It has no lefty friendly features. I rack the slide overhand, and swap mags using my strong hand middle finger. I have to lock the slide back using a reverse hand placement. It is skinny and lightweight, easly concealing AIWB in a Dark Star Gear Hitchhiker. I have only put on decent sights and a Tau Industries Striker Control Device. I can place rounds in a 1" square at 5 yards, and score above 95 with 10 rounds in an NRA B-8 at 10 yards in 10 seconds with it. I am hugely satisfied with it as a carry gun.

    Good luck!

  7. #7
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    Have you seen the Handgun Hero website?
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  8. #8
    Site Supporter Rex G's Avatar
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    Welcome, to a fellow left-hander.

    My favorite lefty auto-pistol experience has been with my SIG P229 pistols, both de-cockers and DAKs. I have aged-out of wanting to shoot .40 S&W, so, my one remaining P229 may become a 9mm, someday, or, I may buy a 9mm P229 or P226. (I was mandated to use .40 S&W, as a duty cartridge, for a number of years.) I find it very easy, for my personal left index finger, to use the magazine release. Others’ personal left index fingers may have different experiences. I preferred that the slide stop be out of my left thumb’s way. I found the P229 to be a “best lefty pistol.” (I would rather have used a P226, but, for a number of years, the P229 was the only SIG approved for duty use.) A problem with long-term commitment to “classic” SIGs, however, is future customer support.

    When my chief OK’ed 9mm duty pistols, in 2015, I switched to Gen4 Glocks. Excellent lefty pistols, for me, except that the mag release button is not quite as accessible to my personal left index finger, as is the case with SIGs. With my recently-acquired Gen5 Glocks, I do not switch the mag release buttons around, and that darned ambidextrous slide release gets in my left thumb’s way. I may grind the protruding part, after I am certain I want to keep the pistols. (The pandemic situation has been keeping me away from shooting ranges, so I have not fully vetted these newer Glocks.)

    Conceptually, the Walther paddle magazine release is appealing. The original version of the Walther PPS checked plenty of boxes, but, I never got around to buying one, before the version 2 arrived, with the push-button mag release. When pre-owned early ones appear at the local gun store, they tend to be chambered for the .40 S&W. I may yet find my well-preserved first-version PPS 9mm.

    FWIW, I am left-handed, but right-armed, meaning that I throw righty, and the way I was trained to draw then-mandated heavy duty revolvers, from then-mandated low-slung duty rigs, was not unlike throwing underhanded, so a right-handed draw felt natural. The right hip being more accessible when seated in patrol vehicles, as well as personal vehicles, it made sense to carry at 0300, all the time. Of course, it made sense, and still makes sense, to train each hand to shoot well, if defensive shooting is the goal. I carried “primary” on my right hip, and carried the second gun for lefty access. Age has not been as kind to my right hand as my left hand, so, in retirement, I am becoming more of a left-hand shooter, firing relatively much less right-handed.
    Last edited by Rex G; 02-27-2021 at 10:36 AM.
    Retar’d LE. Kinesthetic dufus.

    Don’t tread on volcanos!

  9. #9
    It depends on how big is still small enough for you. If you get into the compact form factor, you can look at Beretta PX4 compacts and APX compacts, numerous HKs, M&P9 2.0, lots of options.

  10. #10
    Member
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    Feb 2021
    Location
    Pace, FLorida
    Right now I don't have a Florida conceal and carry permit but I've been thinking about going thru the training and if I do I would want to go through the range portion with a firearm that's more compact than my PPQ.

    I was looking at some video's yesterday and was wondering if the Springfield Arms HellCat would meet my needs?

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