Nebor
Lifer
- Jun 24, 2003
- 29,582
- 12
- 76
Originally posted by: DonVito
Originally posted by: Nebor
I wouldn't compare an HK or a Sig to a Glock, because they're simply a different class of gun. I've NEVER had a failure to fire or failure to load in a Sig or HK (More than 20,000 rounds through Sigs, almost 1000 through my HK.) Glocks, on the other hand, have nowhere near that level of reliability. So an HK is worth the price premium over a Glock, but not over a Sig, IMO.
That's interesting, because it certainly hasn't been my experience. I have experienced FTFs with a friend's Sig 228, and have found some well-maintained HK USPs have awfully gritty triggers. Glocks are an acquired taste in terms of their aesthetics and trigger operation, but I've never experienced any functional problems at all.
Chuck Taylor's legendary Glock 17 didn't experience its first failure to feed until it had fired 33,000 rounds, after being cleaned only once every 10,000 rounds. It has now fired more than 168,000 rounds and been frozen in a block of ice, buried in manure, and been chained to a buoy in the ocean for months, and still works perfectly. I don't think there has ever been a more reliable weapon made than a Glock.
I own 2 Sig 228s (one entirely blued w/ crimson traced laser grips and one two tone w/ a nickel slide) and neither have ever had a failure to fire or failure to load. Among the shooting community, just about everyone will tell you that for a full size combat pistol, it's still impossible to beat the Sig 226. It's been the standard for 20 years. I've put thousands of rounds through mine.
I've never owned a Glock, but I've shot dozens, and seen plenty of failures to load. In my experience, Glocks are pickier about their ammo than Sigs. One guy even had a FTL with his Glock 17 during a live fire room sweeping session. He had to rack the slide to clear the jam. Afterwards we ribbed him mercilessly that he's lucky that plywood badguy has slow reflexes, or he'd be dead.
When it comes down to it, I would trust my life to a Glock by carrying it every day. I've seen too problems with them. That doesn't mean they're terrible guns, and that no one should buy one though. I have a $1200 Kimber Ultra Compact that I won't carry because it's not perfectly reliable. That doesn't mean it isn't a cool little fun gun to shoot though.
