Sigforum K9 handler
| I have never liked them. However, my advice is to go to any hood and look under the drivers seat of a car. They are often located there, and they never belong to anyone. |
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With bad intent
| I think Id rather spend 99 on nice knife, or ice cream or dirt, something more valuable than the high point.
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| Posts: 7928 | Location: One step ahead of you | Registered: February 10, 2009 |
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Get my pies outta the oven!
| I handled a Hi-Point 9mm carbine at my LGS which gets surprisingly good marks from people and I thought it was a decent little carbine for all of 275 bucks. The iron sights were much better actually than my Kel-Tec Sub2000 carbine.
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| Posts: 35047 | Location: Pennsylvania | Registered: November 12, 2007 |
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The Joy Maker
| It's the kind of gun you buy when you don't have money, but you really need a gun. I've personally never shot one, or even held one either, but I feel like they have their place. Their carbines are rather popular as well, and not just amongst the bangers and cholos. quote: Originally posted by Will938: If you don't become a screen writer for comedy movies, then you're an asshole. |
| Posts: 17145 | Location: Washington State | Registered: April 04, 2003 |
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...and now here's Al with the Weather.
| I have shot one. The ergos suck, the trigger is mush and the one I shot had a peep sight...which was strange on a pistol. It was accurate, meaning it put rounds where I told it to but the poor ergos, trigger, and weird sight took a lot more focus than most other guns at the same range.
___________________________________________________ But then of course I might be a 13 year old girl who reads alot of gun magazines, so feel free to disregard anything I post.
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| Posts: 9019 | Location: Lake Stevens, WA | Registered: March 20, 2005 |
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Just because you can, doesn't mean you should
| Any gun I am going to carry will have enough ammo through it to make me familiar enough to operate it properly and to prove that it is reliable. The ammo alone will probably be several hundred dollars. Then I'll buy a decent holster for it and spend some more. I don't get why anybody would consider (unless you are destitute) a cheap gun like that for serious purposes. This reminds me of the threads about driving around on cheap tires.
___________________________ Avoid buying ChiCom/CCP products whenever possible.
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| My only experience with Hi-Point is in having taken one or two off some folks that had no business with a fire arm. If my memory serves me, the first had been stolen and the second had the serial number obliterated. Other than that I am sure they are fine weapons, not.
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| Posts: 106 | Location: State of Confusion | Registered: July 05, 2014 |
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Member
| quote: Originally posted by jljones: I have never liked them. However, my advice is to go to any hood and look under the drivers seat of a car. They are often located there, and they never belong to anyone.
Its funny because its true. I disabled one to make a demo gun. I found it to be severely overcomplicated to disassemble and seemed to have some "interesting" parts that appeared to be someones poor attempt at reinventing the wheel. The ergos are terrible as everything was massively oversized which, if I had to guess, is from using crap materials/components (you need more plastic/pot metal to do the job of a piece of a smaller piece of quality steel). Can I use it to shoot? Sure I guess. I shot several hipoints belonging to a friend who just liked picking up a quantity of guns for a cheap price. They functioned reliably and were reasonably accurate. I found it to be an interesting academic exercise but I'd never seriously consider owning one. I'd instead put my money into a old surplus gun and actually have something of quality that would cost, seriously, about the same. With that being said, much like the baggy pants fad which makes it incredibly hard to run, I'm actually glad bad guys have a niche market. |
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| A family member bought one as a cheap glove box gun. The actual construction of the gun is a perfect example of what pot metal, mim parts and melted Legos as grips can be made in to. The weight makes a p229 stainless elite feel malnourished. The gun functioned flawless, sights where... there, trigger pull was... crappy, and for a heavy gun recoil was stout. Worst thing CAN NOT DISASSEMBLE! that's right, you have to hammer out a roll pin to remove slide from frame. The gun will work, but so does a geo metro, I don't want to use either. |
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| quote: Originally posted by arfmel: They're heavy unwieldy pieces of shit that function surprisingly well.
Yep. I have a carbine as a barn gun. Goes bang every time. No questions asked warranty. |
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Smarter than the average bear
| quote: Originally posted by Anubismp: ... I'd instead put my money into a old surplus gun and actually have something of quality that would cost, seriously, about the same. With that being said, much like the baggy pants fad which makes it incredibly hard to run, I'm actually glad bad guys have a niche market.
Tell me where I can buy a quality old surplus gun for $99 and I'll definitely go there. I have plenty of quality firearms, and it's not that I can't afford better. I'm just seriously curious about the reliability, because I am tempted to buy one or two at $99 just to have. If they work. I find it interesting that most people in general (and certainly here) wouldn't ridicule folks for driving an old reliable beater car. But I see lots of people making fun of the Hi-Point. If it's crap, it deserves ridicule. If it's just big and ugly, but cheap, that's a different matter. And I get the thug association, but the Glock "for-tay" has that same thug association. |
| Posts: 3563 | Location: Baton Rouge, Louisiana | Registered: June 20, 2006 |
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| They work, but why bother? Just because it's cheap doesn't mean it's a good deal. |
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Raised Hands Surround Us Three Nails To Protect Us
| quote: Originally posted by jljones: I have never liked them. However, my advice is to go to any hood and look under the drivers seat of a car. They are often located there, and they never belong to anyone.
Oddly enough in my short 12 years I have never encountered one. Yet, the 1st gun I ever pulled off someone was a Coonan what are the chances of that.
———————————————— The world's not perfect, but it's not that bad. If we got each other, and that's all we have. I will be your brother, and I'll hold your hand. You should know I'll be there for you!
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Get my pies outta the oven!
| quote: Originally posted by Anubismp: The ergos are terrible as everything was massively oversized which, if I had to guess, is from using crap materials/components (you need more plastic/pot metal to do the job of a piece of a smaller piece of quality steel).
They have huge, heavy slides because ALL of them are blowback action guns.
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| Posts: 35047 | Location: Pennsylvania | Registered: November 12, 2007 |
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Member
| Before there was a Hi-Point there was Bryco_Jennings. A Jennings would fire when the trigger was pulled and sometimes when it wasn't.Civil suits took care of that company. Point being Bryco-Jennings had their defenders, the company was in business for a couple of decades but the guns were still American made junk. In the final analysis a Hi-Point would be better than not having a gun at all and if they are truly junk they will go the way of Bryco-Jennings.
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| Posts: 106 | Location: State of Confusion | Registered: July 05, 2014 |
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