Why ask ? It must be your decision as to what feels right to you. I make grips and people ask me which ones i like ? I like all of them BUT each is a personal thing . They must decide what pleases them when laying down the cash.Same with a personal firearm.
It seems like common sense to buy a reliable gun that fits good and already points naturally. Ya, most people can pick up any gun and learn to shoot it properly over time, but why not have one more advantage on your side already? That's like saying "why buy a car that runs properly, when you can buy one that you have to learn to fix?"getting a proper index quickly and consistently is more a function of training than buying a spiffy new gun. It can be done with anything and does not require any specific make/model.
It seems like common sense to buy a reliable gun that fits good and already points naturally. Ya, most people can pick up any gun and learn to shoot it properly over time, but why not have one more advantage on your side already? That's like saying "why buy a car that runs properly, when you can buy one that you have to learn to fix?"
I can see you are obviously a pro, and the trainers at Magpul, AWT, TWS and other places are wrong... I'm sorry to have argued with such a master. I'm glad that you schooled me on how bad one of the most reliable guns right out of the box is, how USP is a waste of money... I'm glad you saved me. I'm kinda sad to see that I have wasted a lot of money on training courses not tought by you, and that I have no idea of what I'm doing as a gunsmith... One thing though, if you are going to argue about something like how easy it is to learn a new grip angle from the change of what one has known their entire life, I don't think you should be dogging on trigger pull..... Just sayin, especially on a gun in which has a lighter pull than the standard 1911, more slack (due to the double action), but lighter.It's not all that hard. Anyone with a modicum of skill can pick up just about any modern handgun and get it to "point naturally" in 15-20 minutes of dryfire.
People get too hung up on the hardware, thinking it a replacement for good software. It ain't.
To the extent that equipment does matter, I'll offer that my USP was ergonomically the worst pistol I've ever owned. The trigger was lousy and it cost entirely too much. If one were trying to "buy skill" via hardware, that's probably the worst choice to do it with.