Bruzilla
Well-Known Member
I have been around and owned guns since I was 16 and I will never, ever, own a Glock. Glocks are very popular for one reason... they are cheap. They cost half of what a good Sig or Beretta costs, so lots of police departments bought a ton of them, which drove the prices down, which drove the civilian market.
Glocks are inherently dangerous due to their light trigger pull and trigger safety. Once your finger is on the trigger, it's just too easy to fire the pistol. I know... the Glock supporters are rushing to their keyboards right now to type "BUT YOU SHOULD NEVER PLACE YOUR FINGER ON THE TRIGGER UNTIL YOU ARE READY TO FIRE!!!!!", which is perfect advice when you are on the range but unrealistic when you are in a life-threatening real-world circumstance, which police officers are always in and lots of concealed carry and home defenders can find themselves in. When it's something besides a paper silhouette in front of you, you're going to place your finger on the trigger, and if you have a Glock you are likely to make a hole in something you didn't intend to, as that woman in Minneapolis learned this year. This is why Glock users have far and away the highest numbers of unintentional discharges of the bang variety.
The trigger pull weight on a Glock is just six pounds, whereas Sigs and Berettas are in the 10-11 pound range, which means you can put a LOT of pressure on that trigger without the gun firing, which is exactly what you want in a high-stress defensive situation where you're finger is on the trigger.
Glocks are inherently dangerous due to their light trigger pull and trigger safety. Once your finger is on the trigger, it's just too easy to fire the pistol. I know... the Glock supporters are rushing to their keyboards right now to type "BUT YOU SHOULD NEVER PLACE YOUR FINGER ON THE TRIGGER UNTIL YOU ARE READY TO FIRE!!!!!", which is perfect advice when you are on the range but unrealistic when you are in a life-threatening real-world circumstance, which police officers are always in and lots of concealed carry and home defenders can find themselves in. When it's something besides a paper silhouette in front of you, you're going to place your finger on the trigger, and if you have a Glock you are likely to make a hole in something you didn't intend to, as that woman in Minneapolis learned this year. This is why Glock users have far and away the highest numbers of unintentional discharges of the bang variety.
The trigger pull weight on a Glock is just six pounds, whereas Sigs and Berettas are in the 10-11 pound range, which means you can put a LOT of pressure on that trigger without the gun firing, which is exactly what you want in a high-stress defensive situation where you're finger is on the trigger.