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Thumbcocker
08-02-2017, 02:15 PM
I ran into a LEO I have known for several years. He always had a holstered Kimber 1911 on his hip and shot it VERY well. Today he was wearing a Glock something. He is the Chief of a local police department. When I commented on his different side arm he told me that the cops in his department would not maintain their Kimbers so they had been forced to switch to what he called "combat tuperware".

I am not commenting on one vs. the other just posting this for a topic of general interest.

Larry Gibson
08-02-2017, 02:51 PM
"he told me that the cops in his department would not maintain their Kimbers"

If he's the "Chief" then who's fault is that?

OS OK
08-02-2017, 03:18 PM
"combat tuperware" . . . :bigsmyl2: . . ."that's rich!"

Der Gebirgsjager
08-02-2017, 04:21 PM
I do find the story interesting. Here's one that's somewhat on point. I think I told it before, but it's a good one.

I worked with the same LEO partner for several months on swing and graveyard shifts during the Calif. Coastal rainy, rainy winter season. Nightly we would find ourselves out in the rain at such activities as traffic accidents, trees across a mountainous county road putting out flares to avoid another accident, etc. Although we wore rain gear, you can't bury your handgun too deeply if you expect to get at it quickly if you need it.

After reaching home at the end of a shift I would always remove my 6" Mod. 19 S&W and dump the cartridges, wipe the gun down, and run a lightly oiled patch through the bore. I'd wipe out the cylinder chambers as well, but then dry them before reinserting the cartridges. My partner carried an identical weapon.

Upon entering the County Jail with an arrestee one was required to remove their handgun from its holster and place it in any available lock box in a series of them mounted in the concrete wall, remove and pocket the key. This was carefully watched on a video camera from upstairs on the 3rd floor where the actual lock up was located, and should a forgetful officer forget to secure his weapon loud disapproval would immediately issue from a speaker.

On one occasion, after returning down in the elevator from the 3rd floor, I inserted the key, removed my revolver, and opened the cylinder to assure myself that it was indeed loaded, then holstered. My partner observed this action and inquired about it. I explained that it had just become routine with me, perhaps to assure myself that after doing my little nightly maintenance routine at the end of the shift that I had indeed reloaded it. Wouldn't want to need to fire it and have it just go "click", you know. My partner stated that it was indeed a good idea and that he would henceforth follow the cylinder inspection routine himself.

Unfortunately his cylinder wouldn't open. It wouldn't turn either. Nor would the hammer cock. Completely rusted up internally from our many nights in the rain, but not much externally, except visible when viewed from the side in the area of the forcing cone and cylinder ratchet. Fortunately we were near the end of the shift. I took it home to fix it for him, as although a brilliant and talented person in many areas, gunsmithing was not among his abilities. A couple of judicious smacks with a rubber mallet did not budge the cylinder or its latch, so an overnight soak with the grips removed in a small tub of kerosene allowed the side plate screws to be removed the next day and I was able to disassemble, clean and oil the mechanism. As I worked on it I reflected on the implications of having a LEO partner with a nonoperational weapon, and it did make me pucker.

So, I do see the Chief's train of thought here. Not all LEOs are "gun nuts", many viewing them as just another tool and worthy of no special consideration except just prior to the infrequent formal inspection. At least plastic doesn't rust. Maybe they'll sell the Kimbers as surplus? Somebody will get lucky!

EMC45
08-02-2017, 06:13 PM
I've seen a Knoxville LEO a few times in Knoxville carrying a 1911. Much respect!

bouncer50
08-02-2017, 06:32 PM
I hear this happen to a few Cops with Glocks. Put their Glock on the bathroom coat hanger. Grab the Glock hit the trigger on the hanger put a round in the ceiling. One cop his fired twice. Explain that one to a chief. A cock and locked 45 will not do this.

Larry Gibson
08-02-2017, 06:50 PM
Don't expect LEO's to be "gun nuts" anymore than I expect soldiers to be. However, frequent inspections of equipment should be done, especially those items that are critical, not only by the LEO's but by their 1st line and above supervisors. On the spot corrections should be made including disciplinary action to frequent offenses. Yeah, I see the chief's lazy train of thought too. However, if my "partner" had a frozen shut revolver like that I'd be kicking myself in the *** because I let the situation get that way. Partners should also look out for each other and making sure each other are fully operational is part of it....that goes for equipment.

Maybe I'm a hard *** but I'm here today because of it and so are a lot of my fellow LEOs and soldiers.

jmort
08-02-2017, 07:20 PM
Don't expect LEO's to be "gun nuts" anymore than I expect soldiers to be. However, frequent inspections of equipment should be done, especially those items that are critical, not only by the LEO's but by their 1st line and above supervisors. On the spot corrections should be made including disciplinary action to frequent offenses. Yeah, I see the chief's lazy train of thought too. However, if my "partner" had a frozen shut revolver like that I'd be kicking myself in the *** because I let the situation get that way. Partners should also look out for each other and making sure each other are fully operational is part of it....that goes for equipment.

Maybe I'm a hard *** but I'm here today because of it and so are a lot of my fellow LEOs and soldiers.

In liberal cities it would be bad for your career if you were preceived to be a firearms enthusiast or pro Second Amendment

tazman
08-02-2017, 08:24 PM
It really isn't a matter of being firearms enthusiast in my opinion. It is a matter of survival on that job.
If a person doesn't care enough to ensure their protective equipment, including their firearm, is fully functional, what does that say about how much they care about their partner and their own self.

Thumbcocker
08-02-2017, 08:32 PM
Definitely not a liberal city.

buckwheatpaul
08-02-2017, 08:46 PM
I agree with Larry Gibson....dont really care what others think as long as they maintain their weapon.....Carried a firearm since 1974 in L.E. and have known so many officers that didnt maintain their weapons.....it is a tool that if you do not maintain it will fail when the chips are down. When I trained I explained the necessity of maintaining their weapons and it seemed to work. Those that were indifferent to their maintenance were generally lazy and useless so I tried to not be around them. The one time spam hit the fan for me everything worked as it should.....

Bigslug
08-02-2017, 08:52 PM
Ahhh. . .the joys of trying to find something that's idiot-proof, coupled with the failure to realize that idiots are ENDLESSLY inventive.

There's not maintaining the gun AT ALL, for which a Glock is, in truth, one of the better ones. You get high round count breakages of small parts with the older variant .40 and .357 guns, but as far as just letting it dry out, get rained on, or just ignored, it's hard to top.

Then there's maintaining the gun WRONG. I'd rather have a Glock not cleaned at all than have it cleaned by a guy who wets every surface down with the wazoo flavor of the month solvent and enthusiastically scrubs with a toothbrush. . .forcing all manner of goo into the working guts which he isn't authorized to take apart at his level. Old Slabsides probably does a little better at that, but it ain't great method for ANYTHING.

Either way, an armorer should be checking it out at reasonable intervals and undertaking the task of setting the clueless straight.

GhostHawk
08-02-2017, 09:06 PM
IMO it is not a matter of being a firearms enthusiast at all.

If you are doing a job that your safety requires you to be able to use a tool. You treat that tool right. Does not matter if it is a rigid pipe wrench or a S&W Revolver.

If your life is riding on the line you take the time, do the due diligence to make sure.
Anything less is pure foolishness.

An officer found with a gun in that condition should have been fired. He is a danger to himself and others.

And it is my experience that most times such people don't learn well from there mistakes until it is too late.

Der Gebirgsjager
08-02-2017, 10:31 PM
Well, Larry, Taz, Paul and GhostHawk, you fellows do me a disservice by your criticism. Firstly, the officer was only about 6 months my junior time on the job, and went through the same academy as I did. The two of you that I know or believe have been LEOs probably never subjected your partner and peer to a weapons inspection, especially if he was long past the rookie stage, which this fellow was, having about 10 years on the job at the time. Perhaps it was the hand of God that things worked out the way they did. I did give him a pithy lecture on firearms maintenance and one's responsibility to themselves, their partners, wives and children, and doubt if it ever happened again. Personally, I've always been more of the mind set to make sure that my stuff was all squared away and to assume that the other guy felt the same way. I'm about all I can handle!

Petrol & Powder
08-03-2017, 12:11 AM
Der Gebirgsjager wrote: "I'm about all I can handle!"

Truer words have never been uttered. He took care of himself and helped his fellow officer when the need arose.

I think he handled that perfectly. He found the problem, addressed it, corrected the issue and they both moved on.
Could it have ended poorly? - yes but it didn't. We deal with what does happen not what could happen.

A gun is a tool. A parachute is a tool. A life jacket is a tool. etc, Sometimes that lack of maintenance has disastrous results and sometimes it is a learning opportunity. Thankfully in Der Gebirgsjager's situation it was merely learning opportunity.

You can drive a car for 40 years and never need a seatbelt or airbags. A fighter pilot could go his entire career and never need a parachute. A fisherman could work his lifetime and never need a lifejacket. That doesn't mean those pieces of equipment should be neglected but it does show how they can be neglected. In the grand scheme, a Glock may be functional more often than other types of handguns and that alone may be enough to improve the overall odds of survival for a collective group of officers.
If your goal is to give the most officers, the best chance you can; a Glock may be the best tool in the overall scheme considering some officers will neglect their firearms. Sometimes simple is good.

tazman
08-03-2017, 04:15 AM
Well, Larry, Taz, Paul and GhostHawk, you fellows do me a disservice by your criticism. Firstly, the officer was only about 6 months my junior time on the job, and went through the same academy as I did. The two of you that I know or believe have been LEOs probably never subjected your partner and peer to a weapons inspection, especially if he was long past the rookie stage, which this fellow was, having about 10 years on the job at the time. Perhaps it was the hand of God that things worked out the way they did. I did give him a pithy lecture on firearms maintenance and one's responsibility to themselves, their partners, wives and children, and doubt if it ever happened again. Personally, I've always been more of the mind set to make sure that my stuff was all squared away and to assume that the other guy felt the same way. I'm about all I can handle!

I wasn't criticizing you. I was criticizing your partner.
You did everything as well as you could have. Your partner failed to keep up his end.
Fortunately, it didn't turn out badly.
As I said, it is a matter of survival on the job.

am44mag
08-03-2017, 05:54 AM
I hear this happen to a few Cops with Glocks. Put their Glock on the bathroom coat hanger. Grab the Glock hit the trigger on the hanger put a round in the ceiling. One cop his fired twice. Explain that one to a chief. A cock and locked 45 will not do this.

Someone who follows basic gun safety practices, and uses some common sense won't do it either.

Thumbcocker
08-03-2017, 09:07 AM
A gun is a tool.....

Never saw an engraved hammer or screwdriver. :bigsmyl2: Guns are special.

skeet1
08-03-2017, 09:57 AM
As a retired LEO of 33 years I have noticed during shooting qualifications a number of officers that had malfunctions The range officer would take their weapon and check it out and usually completely strip it and clean it and the it would function perfectly. In my last job, of 20 years, we would qualify every 6 months and the same officers that had problems 6 months prior often had problems again. This last job most of us carried Glocks and a good share of us worked by our selves. I believe that those officers that were interested in their job and were self starters didn't usually have any problems with their weapons.

I must say this about Glocks. Back in the 80's when I first heard of Glock I was one of the first to criticize them as junk and coming in a "Tupperware" box. I was still critical until 1991 when I started a new job and most of the officers carried Glocks and I started to see how reliable and simple they were and yes I changed to a Glock 17 and carried it to retirement. That Glock had thousands of rounds through it and I don't think I ever had any malfunctions with it. Glocks are very good LEO "tools" but do need a good disassembly and wipe down occasionally. Glock is only one of the current manufacturers of polymer handguns that are excellent but it takes the LEO to do his job and keep it that way.

Ken

EMC45
08-03-2017, 11:37 AM
The guys and gals here carry Sigs. Some quite old, but still functional. I will work on them and inspect them for defects however, I have told many of them on multiple occasions: This is life saving equipment. It may save yours or your fellow Ranger's life. Take care of it. Familiarize yourself with it and clean and maintain it. If not you may be killed. Simple as that.

Tnfalconer
08-03-2017, 12:17 PM
I used to enjoy having the 1911/glock discussion ( I am staunch 1911 by the way). In training LEO for I service it was amazing to me how many do no practicing or skills tests on their own unless forced to and provided ammo from the department. It wasn't always this way. They took pride in their weapon and treated it with care and learned to use it efficiently. Unfortunately a lot of that has gone by the wayside. Sidearms never come out of the holster unles entering the jail or after shift is over.

Had one sheriff tell me that a 1911 cocked and locked looked too "Aggressive". As in those wearing it were looking for a fight. He didn't like it when I told him that every glock that was carried chambered was also "Cocked and locked" you just couldn't see it. That went over like a lead balloon. Now there is a trend of officers being forced to carry an open chamber on duty in their weapon. This trend is meant to force the officer to make a conscious decision to use his weapon and put a stepping stone in front of him using it without thought. THis has also resulted in several job related injuries and fatalities. After a good amount of data, thankfully this is going by the wayside.

Another point to make is that most departments are Monkey see, monkey do. One one sidearm is allowed for the entire department. That means once the sheriff or chief decides on a weapon they all have to carry it. Good or bad. I feel like this is a horrible precident to set but hey, they are free to run things anyway they feel appropriate. I appreciate a glock, they are damn near indestructible. Handle little care with ease and have a solid reliability. However choosing one because it is less maintenance is foolish at best. I have always felt like officers should carry whatever they are comfortable with and can qualify with. That gives them some personal pride in their weapon. I know several LEOs that carry revolvers on the job to this day. The thing is I wouldn't point a gun at any of them. Those guys feel safe with their wheel guns and most are extremely proficient with them. Certainly as good as the average auto shooter. Just some thoughts.

Walkingwolf
08-03-2017, 12:39 PM
Personally after buying the wife a witness I would opt for a CZ platform. The CZ has a FP block, and can be carried just like a Glock, or carried Condition 1, or 2. Personally I liked the model 39's that the state of Illinois issued when I was a University cop.

If a officer cannot maintain his equipment they need to ride a desk.

Der Gebirgsjager
08-03-2017, 04:43 PM
Tnfalconer--I enjoyed reading your post immensely. We certainly see eye-to-eye on a number of things.

I also believe that one is best armed with that which they have the most confidence in and are the most proficient with. Another area of agreement is the value of a good 1911. Until very recent years it was always my favorite sidearm in .45 ACP, and only in later (I guess "older") age have I strayed away to a Star Mod. B.

But I still own and shoot several 1911s. All my life I have had run-ins with the anti-1911 crowd who parrot the line that "cocked and locked is dangerous", and most of them are unfamiliar with either the weapon or how it operates; and still continued with that prejudice despite the addition of the redundant firing pin safety.

I think I encountered the height of ignorance on the last job that I held before retirement. The company had a written rule that all semi-autos carried had to be double action, but prior to the arrival of a new manager it had been largely ignored. I carried a 1911 until "called" on it at a Training Day meeting. The manager reminded me of the rule and said that all semi-autos had to be double action like his Glock. So, in front of the rest of the group (big mistake--egos involved) I invited him to demonstrate the Glock's double action feature. He removed the magazine, cleared the chamber, pulled the trigger, "click", but when I insisted that he pull the trigger again, of course nothing happened. Positively not double action, a "Safe Action" as we all know Glock advertises. He kind of choked up a bit when it was explained that a double action semi-auto would be something like a P-39 or S&W Mod. 39, and that in all fairness he should dump the Glock which was the weapon of choice of almost everyone else present. The following day I started carrying a Para Ord LDA 7:45 and was called into his office where he reminded me that semi-autos had to be double action, and he telephoned the home office for guidance. He informed the person on the other end of the line that we had a conflict. He asked for my LDA which I had cleared, and pulled the trigger. "Ah hah," he informed the listener. "It only clicks once! Not double action," using the knowledge I had just given him the day before. A very tired sounding voice came over the speaker phone, "Is the officer present with you?" "Yes, he is." "Leave him alone. Was there anything else you wanted to talk about? Bye."

The foregoing, absolutely a true story, is related to illustrate how ignorant about the workings of handguns in general many supervisors tend to be. This fellow had the goal in mind of terminating me for carrying a 1911, but didn't know the difference between a standard 1911 and an LDA. The myth of the dangerous 1911, even worse when cocked and locked, persists--and I despair that it will ever be put to rest.

Tnfalconer
08-03-2017, 05:09 PM
I actually know a department in Texas that still uses revolvers only. The sheriff carries a VERY tricked out single action in 45LC. His officers shoot regularly, train weekly and are proficient with them. Everyone I saw was a S/W 686 plus. Damn fine weapon in my opinion and all of his officers could speed load one in under 4 seconds. I don't care what you are shooting, that's lightning. His best statement to me after a quick question of why everyone carried the 686 plus he quoted " if they squeeze the trigger and it doesn't go bang, they squeeze the trigger again". Made perfect sense to me and his deputies were EXCELLENT marksman. WAY above average for any skills level test.

tazman
08-03-2017, 05:55 PM
I just recently( last 6 months) became familiar with the 1911 in both 45ACP and 9mm. I never really handled one much before. I had fired a friends 1911 a couple of times during a range session but couldn't hit anything. I was a confirmed revolver man.
A few months ago I was at the range when an old Army Sergeant walked in with his 1911. During conversation, he asked if I ever tried one. I told him about how poorly I shot one. He said he could fix me up in just a few minutes as he had been a range training officer for much of his military career.
He was right.
I had been trying to shoot the 1911 like I did my revolver. It turns out you can shoot a revolver wrong and still do fairly well. After a few minutes under his tutelage he had me shooting the 1911 fairly well. At least as well as I was shooting my revolver.
Since then I have been using what he taught me and my shooting with both the 1911 and revolvers has much improved.
He also showed me how to properly handle and use the 1911 and how safe they can be.
Unfortunately, I haven't run into him at the range since then. I would like to thank him properly for taking the time to help me the way he did. The things he taught me in just a few minutes may save my life someday.
I am thoroughly impressed with the 1911 as a weapon design and a really fun gun to shoot.
I put 150 rounds through mine this morning at the range.
I really didn't know enough about the 1911 before this recent experience to have an opinion about them. I still don't consider myself expert enough to advise anyone about them but I do know they are a lot of fun and a great pistol.
I also have no experience, none, with Glock pistols. I have never shot one. From what I hear on this site, I would expect them to be an excellent shooter as well.

psweigle
08-03-2017, 06:14 PM
Ahhh. . .the joys of trying to find something that's idiot-proof, coupled with the failure to realize that idiots are ENDLESSLY inventive.


Now that's a thought provoking statement. I like it.

Potsy
08-04-2017, 01:41 PM
I've seen a dry Glock jam. On more than one occasion. Granted, the worst offender wasn't broke in. It was a pistol that was bought new, wiped off, loaded, and thrown in a nightstand for a few years. A few sprays of Rem oil later it was functioning perfectly, but it was a paperweight before that.

That said, I think a Glock is a fine weapon. Never owned one. Never shot a bad one (and I've shot a bunch of them) that was properly maintained.

Those that think Glocks are far superior to the 1911 often forget that WWII, Korea, Vietnam, where the 1911 design was proven, were not sanitary environments. I think a lot folks feelings about the durability/reliability of a Glock stems from the fact that they'd not beat on their pretty 1911 or revolver they way they would a Glock, ergo, confusing incidental abuse with a general lack of maintenance.

It seems to be the general consensus, some folks would be extremely well armed with an old 4" Smith Model 10, others would be hapless and helpless regardless of the design of their equipment or how much ammo they can carry.

9.3X62AL
08-04-2017, 02:36 PM
People don't change the engine oil in their expensive new cars and trucks. People don't clean or lubricate their carry arms. I was Hell On Earth with deputies who didn't keep their firearms maintained and/or who had shade-tree gunsmithing and armorer work performed. In the cases of shade-tree mods, the firearm got DQ'ed immediately, and would only be re-certified with written documentation of repair by a factory-certified 'smith or armorer. It only took 3 or 4 such actions to get the point across.

Our guys and gals were given time after quals was complete to clean and maintain their sidearm(s). It is 10-15 minutes well-spent for a number of reasons. A few sergeants and LTs carped about these 10-15 minutes, and needing troops back in the field ASAP. I ignored them enthusiastically throughout my career. G-- d--- cubicle farmers.

Lloyd Smale
08-05-2017, 09:03 AM
cant wrap my mind around a police officer that doesn't maintain his weapon. To me its about like grabbing a 30 year old parachute that's been sitting in a back room strapping it on and jumping out of a plane! Don't they realize that there ability to go home after shift might be compromised!!

Der Gebirgsjager
08-05-2017, 02:02 PM
True, it is hard to understand, especially to those of us who like guns.

We admire their design, craftsmanship of manufacture, utility, and just plain like to shoot them. But, like 9.3x62AL says above, some folks will spend thousands for a new truck and not change the oil. LEOs are people too, and this illustrates the point.

Now days it seems fashionable to think of the police as being a bunch of blood thirsty thugs that are itching for the opportunity to shoot someone, anyone, even a bystander. Actually, my experience was that about 25% of officers liked guns, 2% were rabidly anti-gun, and the other 73% just didn't much care about guns at all, just viewing it as a necessary tool of the trade. So the 73% is why the larger departments have armorers, and why their existence is necessary at all, because among that 73% are those who neglect maintenance. Not the entire group--just some of them.

It's probably not too different than a lot of other occupations where some neglect the tools of their trade(s). Carpenters and mechanics with rusty tools don't inspire the greatest confidence in their workmanship, and the best machinists usually keep their machinery spotless, cleaning up after every job. LEOs are pretty much a cross section of the population. There is some comfort to be found in the still valid statistic that the vast majority of officers, even in today's world, will never have to fire their weapons defensively.

How's about another true story, one of those so extreme that thinking about it will have you shaking your head for days? Way back in the very early '60s there was an older officer who had been a waist gunner in WW II bombers. He saw lots of action and contrary to all of the PTSD today, he "mellowed out" as an individual. He held the LEO job before the war, and when he came home he resumed his duties.

He hated the revolver hanging on his waist, and maybe had a bad back, although I'm not certain about that. Anyway, right after leaving the office for his beat he would take his gun belt off and hang it over the headrest on the passenger side of the front seat. One day he responded to a traffic collision at a remote coastal location and found a drunken young man behind the wheel. He arrested this individual, and also somewhat unusual for this old officer, he handcuffed the arrestee and put him in the back seat. The patrol cars didn't have cages separating the front and rear seats in those days, and the normal procedure would have been to place the arrestee in the right front seat, handcuffed behind and seat belted, but I guess the officer's gun belt was occupying that position, so the rear seat seemed best.

Well, while he was filling out the necessary paperwork for the tow truck to haul the wrecked vehicle away he heard an engine start, and looked around to see his patrol car being driven away up the coast road. The arrestee, being one of those sufficiently agile individuals able to undo the seat belt and pass his hips and legs through his cuffed wrists so as to now have his hands in the front, had then climbed over the front seat and driven away in the patrol car with the officer's revolver. Well, there was a cement plant nearby with a pretty steady stream of trucks bringing in materials, so the officer commandeered a gravel truck and gave pursuit. Very fortunately he was able to overtake the patrol car when the driver, still being drunk, crashed it into an embankment this time being injured to the extent that he was unable to exit and flee on foot.

So what happened to the officer? Remember, this was a long, long time ago and things were a bit different. He was formally reprimanded. He was very "Mayberry" and the entire incident was kind of "Keystone". He never lived it down. Of course the entire incident was an example of what not to do, but the telling and retelling conjured up such hilarious images that everyone laughed and laughed for years whenever it was mentioned.

Let me say that I knew this fellow for several years and he was really a "salt of the earth" kind of a guy. Stopped by my house one day in his patrol car (gun was hung over the seat) with a kitten he had found and insisted that my little daughter adopt it, which she was happy to do. Personable, generous, well liked within the department and had many, many civilian friends. The year that he was finally due to retire he died of cancer. His funeral was by far the largest I've ever attended with a couple of hundred people having to stand outside the large church.

But, in summary, I guess after the war guns just weren't Danny's thing. A good man. R.I.P.

tazman
08-05-2017, 08:20 PM
I have known a number of really good people who were police officers. Many would go out of their way to help keep a young person out of trouble. I heard a lot of stories about that while I was growing up and even had the good fortune to have a couple of them save me some trouble when I was young.
Good hearted people are a treasure, whoever they may be.

9.3X62AL
08-07-2017, 06:37 PM
If a officer cannot maintain his equipment they need to ride a desk.

Or go sell shoes at the mall.

Der G's assessment is pretty much the same as my own.

Smk SHoe
08-08-2017, 05:33 PM
When you finally build something completly Idiot Proof, they will build a better idiot

Glocks are solid, accurate, and dependable ( I still don't like them)

9.3X62AL
08-09-2017, 02:58 AM
When you finally build something completly Idiot Proof, they will build a better idiot

Glocks are solid, accurate, and dependable ( I still don't like them)

Yessir--you and Bigslug (I'm acquainted with him) are quite correct about idiocy being self-upgrading.

A lot of the guys and gals that post here regularly can probably take most decent sidearm systems and run them quite capably. We don't have to "like' them necessarily, but for myriad reasons we have been obliged to learn our way around them and make them do the right things at the right times for us. This came in handy for me as a part-time range trainer at an agency that approved some 300 make/model/caliber variants of rollers and sliders. I would have given vast sums to be allowed to carry a 1911A1 in 45 ACP, but single action self-loaders were never approved until about a year ago for a limited number of folks. Glocks were not among the makes approved in the first wave of self-loader adoptions in 1987--it was S&W and SIG-Sauer, but were added in 1994 along with H&K and Beretta. The 40 S&W and was added, and the 9mm was amended for uniform use from its former relegation to plainclothes, back-up, and off-duty carry. The 380 ACP came on as the relegation choice and remains as such to the present day.

To me, the Glocks remain as ugly as a mud fence aesthetically speaking. Their beauty lies in their utter reliability if given minimal care & maintenance, and reasonable accuracy for service usage. Their best attribute has been a large cadre of factory-trained armorers in citizen, law enforcement, and military circles able to do armorer-level repairs without heavy investment in shop tooling or fixture acquisition for 90% of the work needed for periodic maintenance. THEY VERY SELDOM BREAK. I'm not a Glockophile, but I do respect their reliability and utility for reasonable initial cost and VERY reasonable refurbishment cost and fast turn-around times--usually on the order of 15-20 minutes shop labor time, with nominal parts cost. I believe the Armed Services will come to regret opting for the Sig-Sauer P-320 modular system over the Glock 17/19 and its maintenance simplicity.

tazman
08-09-2017, 04:45 AM
This has been very informative about the Glock pistols. I have never handled or shot one since I didn't care for how they looked. Seems I may need to look into then a bit.
Are some models better than others or are they all pretty much the same type of quality?
Are there any specific models I would need to avoid?

9.3X62AL
08-09-2017, 01:02 PM
Generation 2 Glock pistols in 40 S&W caliber were the usual suspects in the "Glock ka-BOOM" scenarios that were reported in the early years of that variant/caliber combination. The Generation 3 & 4 pistols seem to have overcome that trait, and don't give fired cases that "Glock Bulge" or "Glock Smilie" or "Guppied Appearance". Aftermarket barrels that give case-head support sell well, and if a Gen 2 in 40 S&W is selected then a barrel swap might be wise.

Some folks have excellent results with Glock OEM barrels using cast bullets. Other folks do not. In 45 ACP I found Glock barrels to be VERY lead-friendly; cast bullet work in 40 S&W, 10mm, and 9mm may follow soon. Glock twist rates in OEM barrels are quite fast (excepting 45 ACP), 4 turns/meter (1 in 9.8") which can complicate cast bullet mechanics. The slower twist rates in aftermarket barrels and their tighter internal dimensioning might be justification enough to spring for a swap tube. From some comments made by Doug Guy concerning Glock barrels, they are harder than woodpecker lips and a real bee otch kitty to machine. Brushing out any leading you might install inside one likely won't damage the finish or the metallurgy.

Between our girls and ourselves we have 7 of these wunderplastic critters in hand. Our girls love the ugly things, and they are kind of like the runt puppy the kids brought home who grows up to be a great watchdog and faithful family friend. I have seen close to a thousand examples in the hands of my old shop's deputies in 9mm--40 S&W--and 45 ACP. I have one each of 20SF and 29SF in 10mm. I have yet to personally see any glaring manufacturing flaw in any example. Our range staff has seen a couple such things, and Glock handled the matters very quickly via replacement.

Best of breed? To me, Glock 23--the mid-sized 40 S&W. The grip length fits just about everyone's hands but is small enough to conceal with minimal hassle, barrel length is 4.02". 14 rounds on deck when full-up, 40 rounds on hand with 2 spare mags along for the ride. And the 40 S&W round is no freakin' joke as felon disincentivizer. A close second would be either the Glock 32 (357 SIG), a round that duplicates the FBI's Federal #357B loading (125 grain JHP @ 1425 FPS), or simply fit a swap barrel in 357 SIG to your existing 40 S&W. Same mags, swap barrel and go play.

Glock REALLY SHOULD make the mid-size models in 45 ACP and 10mm. These are the only gaps I see in their expansive lineup.

william l evans
08-10-2017, 03:06 PM
I was a leo from 1969 until 2001 and an armour from 1981 until retirement. Every three months the Dept. qualified. I was not a instructor but was there to inspect the officer's weapon. I kept records of the condition of their handguns. I made the slackers clean their guns in my presence, you would be surprised how quickly they would get with the program.

9.3X62AL
08-10-2017, 04:31 PM
Yessir. DQ 3-4 sidearms, and the word will get around most ricky-tick.

W.R.Buchanan
08-10-2017, 07:27 PM
Kimbers are nice guns, and should be taken care of.

Glocks tend to be looked at as tools, and as a result receive not nearly as much attention.

A Kimber in a day to day role would really need to be looked at closely several times a month.

A Glock in a similar role would be just fine being looked at once a month or maybe twice if shot.

The one thing I find problematic is guys loading the same rounds back into the magazine each day when they unload the gun.. Just jamming the mag back in puts a flat spot on the top round and if you chamber it from the magazine it is only a matter of time until the bullet is being shoved back into the case from bouncing off the feed ramp.

Best to rotate rounds in the magazine and load the barrel manually so you avoid this problem.

I personally think that if you are going to carry a gun for a living that you should both know how to use it with a great degree of proficiency, and take care of it,,, and not ever take it for granted. your life kind of depends on it,,, Right?

My .02.

Randy

Thumbcocker
08-10-2017, 07:56 PM
What would constitute "taking care of"? My idea would be a weekly disassembly and wipe down with a good looking over. I do tend to put a tiny film of grease on locking lugs and slide rails. Other friction points get one drop of oil from a needle oiler. I have never carried day in and day out so I am genuinely ignorant here.

35remington
08-11-2017, 02:52 PM
For carry I grease the rails and sliding surfaces so I do not worry about the oil running off. Inspect periodically for lint and gunk. I am likely to have little chance of gunk buildup because after any range familiarization practice I clean and relubricate the gun.

For cold weather use where I may have to leave the gun in the truck safe when transiting free fire/no right to self defense zones I use oil rather than grease and make sure I lubricate the gun more often to avoid the inevitable runoff. Cold guns in cold vehicles are probably best not greased. Against the body where the gun is continually warm grease is fine even in cold weather.

It is up to the user to assess the climatological and temperature conditions the gun will be used under and respond appropriately for maintenance purposes. Under circumstances where periodic extreme cold conditions are encountered something more cold resistant than oils may be needed.

And....carrying a clean properly lubed gun of any type is probably always better than carrying a dirty unlubricated one whether it be revolver or autoloader.

Since autoloaders should properly be chamber fed from the magazine, ride the slide home a little when chambering to avoid setback issues but be sure the slide is fully in battery before holstering. Easy to do.