doddg, glad you're happy with it. Lovely carry gun IMO ... just didn't work out with my hands quite as well I'd have liked.
The first time I fired a 365 over a year ago, I lost control and spent $300 more than what I had in my perfectly good Shield to buy one.
I know what you mean about fitting with your hands.
I once had a Walther that I was grateful to get and lately a little Sig 938 & thought I'd keep forever, but my hands said otherwise.
Me and the ol' Shield -- which has Talon's in the skateboard-like texture on it -- still toolin' along together.
The Shield 2.0 is even better, from my experience.
When the stay-at-home order is lifted and things get closer to normal -- hopefully! -- I'm thinking about a couple more .22LRs ... a S&W Performance Center Victory for a new pistol and maybe a Thompson Center Performance Center TCR22 for a new rifle.
Feel like burnin' through some little bullets.
You can't go wrong with "a couple more .22LRs."
Just 2 days ago I talked with a member here about their SW Performance Victory in the classifieds.
I didn't get it b/c recently I "stole" a Browning Buckmark Camper from a member with a Tactical barrel & flat trigger, which I surmised with my eyes would be as accurate.
I've had 3 Victorys, two I picked up for $300 & $325, and the last was one bought from a member with 5 mags, red dot & trigger work ($400), that he'd used for Steel Matches.
I should have kept the last Victory, since I love the different flavors of multiple .22LRs.
I've spent "days" so far in the garage & shed with more to come: not a good range substitute.
Truly, if I'm standing when this thing is over, I'm going to make a whole lot of empty brass.
I think I've run out of gear to clean & organize. Need some trigger time.
I haven't stuck firmly to this rule, but especially after the recent shenanigans, I'm done selling guns unless I absolutely have to. There's a few reasons for this.
1.) I've previously sold a perfectly good carry gun to get a "better" carry gun that turned out to have reliability problems. An RMA label solved that problem, but there were definitely some self-administered kicks to the posterior over that one.
When it comes to CC, I started with a less expensive revolver (which would have been fine) & the same with a semi-auto (which needed replaced).
I have no regrets about any CC I've sold b/c I'm thrilled with what I ended up with & CC are just "tools," but it is fun to have a tool you really love.
2.) I've had at least one great idea on how Gun B was better than Gun A not go my way.
Been there & done that, & have ended up buying some of the brands I've sold, over again.
I had to learn what a member told me: keep what you enjoy shooting, not just what is the most accurate: lesson learned.
There is a correlation between the two variables (joy & accuracy), but not always.
I've sold a gun I really liked b/c of accuracy but the magazines were irritating to load, even after buying a new magazine that did the same.
Life is too short.
3.) I can't tell you how many people have suddenly Seen The Light thanks to Coronavirus. This has prevented me from making some planned acquisitions as well as driven me to help some folks acquire some things. It would have been a hell of a lot easier to do so if I had held on to some of my "eh, I don't really need this anymore" sales for a rainy day.
Anymore I now look at my gun safe not only as a toolbox or collection but as a rainy day savings account all its own.
Humorously, I have even bought the same gun that I'd owned before, but didn't realize it at the time.
Hey, it came back to me with an upgraded barrel & trigger so I win.
You, sir, have won the buy sell trade game. That's priceless!
I did that recently with an AR15 I had sold.
I knew it was the same one but it came back with more goodies than before, more ammo, and I paid less to get it back.
Sold it again to someone else for even higher. Win-win-win