It certainly helps, moves the weight to the shoulders which are able to better handle it.I need to get the shoulder holster out. I usually reserve it for road trips but it might help with some back issues I’ve been having
Depending on your shoulder holster, might not need to get a whole new rig. I know with the Galco, you can swap holsters and everything else stays the same. Obviously the mag size might mean you need to either swap that too, or just get another at that point.I think the only shoulder holster i have is for a 1911.
When decocked, it doesn't allow a "proper" double action pull a la Walther P99?Warning: Off topic post.
If you proceed, do not complaint about not being warned
I was at the LGS this week and he showed me a new model Canik that they had just received. The reset must have been the shortest I have ever seen in my life. I mean, I barely moved my finger forward and the trigger reset. I am not sure if that would cause any issues, but it definitely felt cool.
Keep in mind this is a striker fired gun, it had a decoder on the top of the slide, lie a squarish button. So what is up with that? If you decock and carry, you have to jack the slide, throwing out a live round, to get it ready to fire...
No. Dead triggerWhen decocked, it doesn't allow a "proper" double action pull a la Walther P99?
I believe Canik had some variation of the P99 AS that was a type of SAO with the decocker button, IIRC...No. Dead trigger
I'm not trying to argue (or dirty up the Sig thread with Canik talk), but are you sure? [Edit: It appears there's a single-action version and a double-action version of this. Thanks for the additional info B&G.]No. Dead trigger
I didn't watch the YouTube video on that page.The TP9DA was designed to give shooters the ability to carry a double-action/single-action style trigger in a modern polymer frame. The user-friendly decocker system enables users to carry the TP9DA with an extended first trigger pull, similar to traditional hammer-fired pistols.
Did it look like this? This things trigger is on par with the Timney trigger for G****, just a tad heavier. Absolutely impressive.Warning: Off topic post.
If you proceed, do not complaint about not being warned
I was at the LGS this week and he showed me a new model Canik that they had just received. The reset must have been the shortest I have ever seen in my life. I mean, I barely moved my finger forward and the trigger reset. I am not sure if that would cause any issues, but it definitely felt cool.
Keep in mind this is a striker fired gun, it had a decoder on the top of the slide, lie a squarish button. So what is up with that? If you decock and carry, you have to jack the slide, throwing out a live round, to get it ready to fire...
I think you need to look at the TP9SA. The TP9DA is similar to the P99AS- decocker for long pull first shot.I'm not trying to argue (or dirty up the Sig thread with Canik talk), but are you sure?
From the site, the TP9DA (assuming it's the same model) has a decocker for a longer pull but not a dead trigger:
I didn't watch the YouTube video on that page.
Again, I've never handled one and I'm not sure if it's even the exact model you handled. A dead trigger would be utterly useless as an anti-stress feature IMO (what if one is unable to rack the slide under duress).
Thank you! Clearly I'm not very familiar with the Canik lineup. It appears from this quick review that the purpose is allow the disassembly without puling the trigger. There's a YouTube link in there regarding accidental decocking (I didn't watch it). I don't get the point, but I guess if it were a person's first firearm, it might make sense to that person.I think you need to look at the TP9SA. The TP9DA is similar to the P99AS- decocker for long pull first shot.