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Prepared for the Worst, Providing the Best |
What guns do you have that don't really make sense when you consider them on paper, but just flat-out work for you? I'm not talking about safe-queens or collectors pieces, but actual carry guns that you regularly use. My P245 is that for me. It's a large, heavy gun with a 7 round capacity. It has a DA/SA trigger, and is chambered in the increasingly touted to be obsolete .45 ACP cartridge. It's somewhat rust-prone, and the felt-recoil has been described as stout by some. It's expensive, out of production, and parts can be hard to find. With all the options out there today, this isn't really a gun that anybody should choose. Despite all that, I love this gun. I've been carrying it for about a year now when I'm not at work, and it is perfect for me. It knocks off just enough bulk from the P220 to be EDC-able, yet retains it's supurb trigger and shooting characteristics. It's well-balanced and reliable, comes into action without the need to disengage a manual safety, yet remains a very safe design. And it also has some old-school character, which I'll admit is one of the reasons I like it. Since this photo I've added an SRT kit and night sights, which have turned it into my favorite carry gun of all time. Even with ammo being scarce I always try to put a few mags through it each range trip just to stay in practice. I did that today after I got done breaking in the little Beretta, and those big 230 grain slugs very satisfyingly tore the center out of the target. So here's mine. What's yours? | ||
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Member |
I’ll go ahead and dispense with the obvious one. 1911. The gun weighs 2,5 lbs empty Holds 7 or 8 rounds. You have to carry it cocked. It’s expensive to get it to run. Its more difficult to field strip than most modern guns. You have to maintain it carefully to get it to run. But dammit. I shoot it better than almost anything I’ve ever shot. ----------------------------------------- Roll Tide! Glock Certified Armorer NRA Certified Firearms Instructor | |||
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Member |
The love it or hate it P250. In the soon to be obsolete .45ACP The rear sight.... Proprietary! Love mine. End of Earth: 2 Miles Upper Peninsula: 4 Miles | |||
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The Whack-Job Whisperer |
S&W 4566. Just......perfect, for me. And despite all the nervous nancy's on the gunboards crying about "No spare parts!" and "No manufacturer support!", I have yet to break anything. Or have a single malfunction. Going on two decades using the 4566. I change the recoil spring every 3K rounds and keep it lubed. It keeps shooting. Reliably and accurately. Great pistol! Regards 18DAI 7+1 Rounds of hope and change | |||
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Pursuing the wicked |
Rossi 720 3" 44 Special for me. Yes, it's "off brand". Yes, it's a 5 shot revolver. But, I can't help loving them. So much that I have a pair. .44 special is one of my favorite cartridges, and still very potent. Occasionally I'll carry one of them, but usually its a 43X with three mags because of capacity. | |||
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Gracie Allen is my personal savior! |
I'm surprised no one's mentioned the P220 in 9mm, particularly with the heel-clip magazine. Comparing brochure blurbs, it's a non-starter. Actually having one around and shooting it, it's a joy. | |||
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Member |
In today’s world of good, small 9mm pistols the P239 doesn’t make sense. It’s a great shooter and still carries easily. ============================================ Photographs: https://photobucket.com/u/photoman12001 ----------------------------------- Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/photoman12001/ ----------------------------------- YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/photoman12001/videos | |||
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Busier than a cat covering crap on a marble floor |
My 1994 'Big' Pony ________________________________________________________ The trouble with trouble is; it always starts out as fun. | |||
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Member |
PX4 subcompact. On paper it's too big for a subcompact, weighs too much. Not to me. Shoots like a laser, is 13+1, outstanding trigger, especially after Burke worked it over, and takes a factory sleeve 17rd mag for backup. What am I doing? I'm talking to an empty telephone | |||
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Member |
Glock 43 - low capacity, and “bigger” than say a P365 or a Hellcat - regardless it carries better for me than either of those. While the 43X is nice my favorite is still the G43... | |||
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My other Sig is a Steyr. |
Glock 21 in 38 Super. | |||
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Prepared for the Worst, Providing the Best |
There's some good stuff here. Amazing that the G43 is making the list. It doesn't seem all that long ago when that thing came out and everybody wanted one. | |||
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E tan e epi tas |
Beretta 92 compact. It’s YUGE for a compact by the numbers but in practice it’s a great gun. "Guns are tools. The only weapon ever created was man." | |||
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Prepared for the Worst, Providing the Best |
Good call on that one. I'd trade body parts for a nice 92 compact Type M. | |||
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Member |
I love the P239. Many on here and elsewhere poopoo it saying it's obsolete, too heavy, too big and doesn't hold enough rounds etc. It 'sucks' enough, on paper, that even Sig Sauer discontinued and abandoned it. But, it's an amazing carry piece that also shoots amazingly well. Between the P239 and the P229, both in .357Sig, I have no need for another. Sig Sauer still doesn't make anything I'd rather have. | |||
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Prepared for the Worst, Providing the Best |
It's hard not to love a 1911. I can't argue with that choice at all. I don't carry them because I don't like manual safeties, but I own a couple and agree that they definitely meet the definition of "excellent guns"! I'm seeing some love for the P239, too. I shot a P239 once back early in my shooting career, had a bad experience, and haven't touched one since. Maybe I need to re-evaluate that and give it another shot. I tend to really like guns of the "compact" or "large subcompact" form factor, especially single-stacks, I just had some ergonomic issues with that one. My shooting technique has improved somewhat over the years, so maybe that would be a non-issue today. | |||
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Member |
What is funny is this subject is just a Johnny Come Lately or flavor of the month deal. Someone will come out with something new and all of a sudden “that’s what you should be carrying!” When I daily carried a P239 in 357sig, it was “too low capacity”, and “too heavy for what it is”. Then it was “you need to be able to fight with your CCW” and they meant double stack, high capacity, etc. Then all of a sudden everyone is buying single stack subcompacts like the 43. I was like really? Just a few years ago you said my 239 was low capacity???? In reality, carry what you want. Carry something you shoot well and that is comfortable for you to carry, or something you don’t mind dressing around. It’s your money, and your life, so don’t listen too much to others. If you shoot it well, it’s reliable and comfortable for you to carry, then it doesn’t much matter what others are carrying. What I carry starts and stops on the range. How small or large it is, is irrelevant if I don’t shoot it well. Everyone’s hands are different, recoil pulse tolerant, different, trigger preference, etc, etc. What am I doing? I'm talking to an empty telephone | |||
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Prepared for the Worst, Providing the Best |
I agree 100%, and that has always been the deciding factor for me as well. The really cool thing about the "Johnny Come Lately" aspect of gun culture is that if you can avoid buying into the hype and watch the market, there are some great deals to be had on excellent guns that are no longer the flavor of the month. I'm happy to help folks try out the fancy new stuff by giving them $0.50 on the dollar or less for some of the proven good stuff they're trading in for it. The trick is timing it right and buying when a model is no longer popular, but before it becomes a "classic". | |||
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fugitive from reality |
J frame in 38 Special. Need I eleborate? _____________________________ 'I'm pretty fly for a white guy'. | |||
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Member |
You do not. | |||
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