What Is A Good Pistol?
Posted: Sun Oct 13, 2019 3:57 am
Lord, there is a lot of noise and confusion here. Subjectivity is up there with
wheel landing vs three point. Anyways, here are my objective considerations:
1) it has to go bang every time you pull the trigger. Don't laugh. A lot of guns
jam and don't feed reliably. This is a really big one. Learn about magazine
springs. You will learn that they have an awful lot in common with the springs
in Lycomings.
2) it has to have a good trigger. This is huge for me, because I'm a terrible shot.
I need a really good trigger to get any kind of group. A good shooter can be
accurate with a really shitty trigger, and that's just not me. I can land any broken
airplane as well as anyone, but hey, that's how I've spent my life.
3) good sights. Stock sights are often shitty. Aftermarket sights can make you
look like a mexican pimp, though.
4) it has to feel good in your hand. Size, balance, etc. Very subjective.
Note that caliber and muzzle velocity don't even make the "big four". That's
because they really aren't as important as everyone makes them out to be.
Like single vs double stack. Everyone wants a magazine with 30 rounds
because they think they're going to start World War Three with their plastic pistol.
Cost of ammunition is of course is a consequence of your choice of caliber.
You can choose .22 or .25 or .32 or .380 or 9mm or .38 special or .357 magnum
or .40 or 10mm or .44 magnum or .45 ACP or .50 AE or .50 magnum, and I've
probably missed a bunch. Elmer Keith and John Browning would be disappointed.
9mm "parabellum" aka luger (shitty pistol IMHO) is probably the most popular.
Think of it as a hot .22 ... hardly any recoil, but like .22 cheap as dirt, which is
good - you can buy lots, and put thousands of rounds through your pistols.
Your objective should be to put 100,000 rounds through your pistol, after which
it will be worn out, but you will be awesome with it. Not unlike flying - you want
to put 10,000 hours on each type that you fly.
I'm sure there are people here shooting .45-70 in their pistols, like the BFR, but
like Rob Holland, they don't need any advice from me.
wheel landing vs three point. Anyways, here are my objective considerations:
1) it has to go bang every time you pull the trigger. Don't laugh. A lot of guns
jam and don't feed reliably. This is a really big one. Learn about magazine
springs. You will learn that they have an awful lot in common with the springs
in Lycomings.
2) it has to have a good trigger. This is huge for me, because I'm a terrible shot.
I need a really good trigger to get any kind of group. A good shooter can be
accurate with a really shitty trigger, and that's just not me. I can land any broken
airplane as well as anyone, but hey, that's how I've spent my life.
3) good sights. Stock sights are often shitty. Aftermarket sights can make you
look like a mexican pimp, though.
4) it has to feel good in your hand. Size, balance, etc. Very subjective.
Note that caliber and muzzle velocity don't even make the "big four". That's
because they really aren't as important as everyone makes them out to be.
Like single vs double stack. Everyone wants a magazine with 30 rounds
because they think they're going to start World War Three with their plastic pistol.
Cost of ammunition is of course is a consequence of your choice of caliber.
You can choose .22 or .25 or .32 or .380 or 9mm or .38 special or .357 magnum
or .40 or 10mm or .44 magnum or .45 ACP or .50 AE or .50 magnum, and I've
probably missed a bunch. Elmer Keith and John Browning would be disappointed.
9mm "parabellum" aka luger (shitty pistol IMHO) is probably the most popular.
Think of it as a hot .22 ... hardly any recoil, but like .22 cheap as dirt, which is
good - you can buy lots, and put thousands of rounds through your pistols.
Your objective should be to put 100,000 rounds through your pistol, after which
it will be worn out, but you will be awesome with it. Not unlike flying - you want
to put 10,000 hours on each type that you fly.
I'm sure there are people here shooting .45-70 in their pistols, like the BFR, but
like Rob Holland, they don't need any advice from me.