IÂ’ve been carrying my hk40 usp but itÂ’s pretty heavy. IÂ’ve been thinking about a 9mm glock. Any thoughts?
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I had the exact same problem. I carried a HK40 and it was a heavy gun to tote around. Than I carried the Springfield Armory xd40. It was a great gun to carry. But shooting it, it was a little on the small side even with the extended mags. I liked the safety trigger and wished it didn't have that redundant safety to think about. Now I'm carrying a Glock 23, the same size as a Glock 19 but 40 cal. It has 4 additional grip sizes in the box to fit most hands. I give up a little comfort over the Springfield but gain confidence in having a gun fit my hand and always ready to shoot.
A word about holsters. A stiff kydex holster will poke you in the side every chance it gets. The Blackhawk holsters have a release button that I forget is there or I fumble around looking for it. The Fobus is softer and comfortable and has enough tension without a release button. I added a light and bought a couple Code 4 Concealment holsters which stab me relentlessly. I need to look for a Fobus that accomodates my trl2.
That's the route I took. It's not perfect. There's better comfort options for a gun that probably doesn't fit you. There's better guns that would probably cost you those first few precious shots.
I usually carry a customized Colt Officer's ACP in .45 ACP. I carry two spare magazines.
Get a Tier 1 Concealed holster.
I see that many people here carry various kinds of handguns. I am curious how it works out when switching off between a DAO and a SA with a safety and a DA/SA. I've carried a Glock for most of the 21 years I've been an officer and have 100's of thousands of draws and shots on that platform. I used to carry an off-duty that had a safety and was a SA/DA because it was more convenient. I qualified with them and shot them quite often so I was comfortable carrying them. About 13 years ago I had to draw and fire my Taser. The Taser has a manual safety that turns on the device. I no time to think, I just drew and fired. But it didn't fire because under stress, I didn't activate the safety thus I fumbled. I have so many reps on my Glock/DAO platform that it was my "go to" under stress even though I practiced with other safety platforms and my Taser. I still carry my Taser but I swore off any platforms that require a safety. I just have too many reps on my duty platform to feel safe that I could operate it under stress. My off-duty Gen 5 G19 is IDENTICAL to my to my duty G17M in all practical ways. I even make sure I use the same night sights. I do own a S&W .38 for back-up that I can point/shoot if need be I don't really carry it off-duty since a speed reload under stress might be quit difficult for me. My word of caution (just I tell recruits) be careful carrying something too different to what you typically train with because under stress, it might take valuable seconds to get it working. time you might not have. Just my .02.
Bingo! That's why I only carry Glock/striker fired weapons only. Now I'm not saying that striker fired weapons are better. It's strictly since I've always carried a Glock for 28 years, I'm not going to start carrying a weapon with a different protocol. In times of stress, my muscle memory is going to reign supreme, no matter what weapon I'm using. And I just don't trust myself to be able to remember what type I'm carrying. Other opinions may vary. And other's may be able to figure out whether they are carrying a Glock or a 1911 instantly during time of stress. I'm just not that smart.
I carry a gen 4 Glock 23 fde with green Trijicon night sights, fully polished super short reset trigger, and a trl2. Oddly enough, my brother in law's IMPD Glock 22 that I now own has an even shorter reset. He said an armorer at IMPD went through it. A female armorer. She's got some skills.
You have to watch out for them female armorers.
They can hard grind your Glock quicker than you can whip it out.
I carry a gen 4 Glock 23 fde with green Trijicon night sights, fully polished super short reset trigger, and a trl2. Oddly enough, my brother in law's IMPD Glock 22 that I now own has an even shorter reset. He said an armorer at IMPD went through it. A female armorer. She's got some skills.
She has been doing it for decades and has a mouth that would make a sailor blush. She's good people.You have to watch out for them female armorers.
They can hard grind your Glock quicker than you can whip it out.