Doug M.
Member
Took my 4" Shield 2.0 w/RDS to the range yesterday to start testing and break-in. I will do a real/follow up report sometime soon, when I finish.
BLUF: 377 total rounds of mixed (Winchester 100 round box ball and a 50 round box of Black Hills) ball and carry ammo (69 rounds of BH 115 +p Barnes and 80 rounds of the similar Barnes load as they no longer sell components). The pistol had been a demo model in their shop and the RDS was already mounted; all I did was make sure the screws were tight. (A friend told me his came with thread locker of some kind on the screws; I presume so as I checked today and they had not backed off.) The RDS was ... if not spot on, close enough for my eyes and needs. I did a little bit of shooting for group and got a hole about the size of a quarter with 8 rounds (a couple of times) at 7 yards. Good thing as I had left the RDS adjustment stuff at home like an idiot after stripping, cleaning, and lubing as directed. I had sanded the right side of the grip for future carry (I'm left handed). I was not shooting for accuracy most of the time once I confirmed that the RDS was at least close.
I started with my 7 loaded mags (the 2 included, 1 each 7 and 8 round, plus the 5 more I bought; 2 8 round, 3 7). Most of the shooting I did was for function. Simple answer: No malfs. Not a single problem. I checked the sight today and it is still tight. I feel confident that right now I could load it with carry ammo and go forth; my holster and mag pouch from Dale Fricke should be here Monday. I won't yet, on principal. I have another 200 rounds of the Barnes ammo ready to go with me. I may go through my ammo and look for some other carry ammo, but I think most of the other stuff I have is the 127 grain Winchester +P+; a great round and fine in my Glocks, but I don't have much left and S&W opposes the use of such.
Things that were sub-optimal: I did not test the pistol with a loaded chamber and fully loaded mag until late in the session. I had done some stuff earlier in the day that did not favor a long shooting session, which did not even start until I had been up for 12 hours. I had a hard time getting the 8 round mags to seat under those circumstances; the 7s did not. Some of that might have been me. I was tired and maybe a little dehydrated.
Worse, my hand was sore. The factory checkering is just fine for 50 rounds. Sometime after 100, it was less fine. Toward then end, it was ... really unpleasant. I have now sanded it all down a good bit. I think it will be at least ok. With the narrower grip of the single stack magazine, it was not a comfortable combo. Not near as bad as a J frame, but not as pleasant as a full sized Glock. Not really a surprise, when one thinks about it. It's really simple physics; more felt recoil due to the smaller contact surface and lighter weight, compounded by the aggressive checkering. This a personal defense pistol, not a target or plinking gun, so to a great extent the compromises work out this way. I think the RDS is workable, and the smart trend for a defense or duty platform. For new shooters, it will be easy, as there is no transition from using irons (there is a difference in sight plane). For ... "more senior" shooters, heavily trained in the Gunsite model, the transition will be potentially unpleasant, but really worth it when one's eyes are less flexible than they were. I'm in this latter camp; just turned 60 and my eyes, which have always taken a lot of correction, have lost a lot of flexibility in the last 10 years. For a duty pistol, I think an M&P or Glock duty pistol with the RDS is a winner and worth the cost; from my understanding the latest generation RMR is the choice.
With so few rounds through it, I see no reason to clean and lube. A carry pistol that won't go 1000 or so rounds without cleaning is likely defective. I'll admit I did a very modest one patch wipe of the barrel and mag well, and rubbed a drop of lube on a patch on the outside of the barrel while it was locked back. I plan to go again later this week, once I figure out some other schedule issues, then clean the pistol and mags for real.
BLUF: 377 total rounds of mixed (Winchester 100 round box ball and a 50 round box of Black Hills) ball and carry ammo (69 rounds of BH 115 +p Barnes and 80 rounds of the similar Barnes load as they no longer sell components). The pistol had been a demo model in their shop and the RDS was already mounted; all I did was make sure the screws were tight. (A friend told me his came with thread locker of some kind on the screws; I presume so as I checked today and they had not backed off.) The RDS was ... if not spot on, close enough for my eyes and needs. I did a little bit of shooting for group and got a hole about the size of a quarter with 8 rounds (a couple of times) at 7 yards. Good thing as I had left the RDS adjustment stuff at home like an idiot after stripping, cleaning, and lubing as directed. I had sanded the right side of the grip for future carry (I'm left handed). I was not shooting for accuracy most of the time once I confirmed that the RDS was at least close.
I started with my 7 loaded mags (the 2 included, 1 each 7 and 8 round, plus the 5 more I bought; 2 8 round, 3 7). Most of the shooting I did was for function. Simple answer: No malfs. Not a single problem. I checked the sight today and it is still tight. I feel confident that right now I could load it with carry ammo and go forth; my holster and mag pouch from Dale Fricke should be here Monday. I won't yet, on principal. I have another 200 rounds of the Barnes ammo ready to go with me. I may go through my ammo and look for some other carry ammo, but I think most of the other stuff I have is the 127 grain Winchester +P+; a great round and fine in my Glocks, but I don't have much left and S&W opposes the use of such.
Things that were sub-optimal: I did not test the pistol with a loaded chamber and fully loaded mag until late in the session. I had done some stuff earlier in the day that did not favor a long shooting session, which did not even start until I had been up for 12 hours. I had a hard time getting the 8 round mags to seat under those circumstances; the 7s did not. Some of that might have been me. I was tired and maybe a little dehydrated.
Worse, my hand was sore. The factory checkering is just fine for 50 rounds. Sometime after 100, it was less fine. Toward then end, it was ... really unpleasant. I have now sanded it all down a good bit. I think it will be at least ok. With the narrower grip of the single stack magazine, it was not a comfortable combo. Not near as bad as a J frame, but not as pleasant as a full sized Glock. Not really a surprise, when one thinks about it. It's really simple physics; more felt recoil due to the smaller contact surface and lighter weight, compounded by the aggressive checkering. This a personal defense pistol, not a target or plinking gun, so to a great extent the compromises work out this way. I think the RDS is workable, and the smart trend for a defense or duty platform. For new shooters, it will be easy, as there is no transition from using irons (there is a difference in sight plane). For ... "more senior" shooters, heavily trained in the Gunsite model, the transition will be potentially unpleasant, but really worth it when one's eyes are less flexible than they were. I'm in this latter camp; just turned 60 and my eyes, which have always taken a lot of correction, have lost a lot of flexibility in the last 10 years. For a duty pistol, I think an M&P or Glock duty pistol with the RDS is a winner and worth the cost; from my understanding the latest generation RMR is the choice.
With so few rounds through it, I see no reason to clean and lube. A carry pistol that won't go 1000 or so rounds without cleaning is likely defective. I'll admit I did a very modest one patch wipe of the barrel and mag well, and rubbed a drop of lube on a patch on the outside of the barrel while it was locked back. I plan to go again later this week, once I figure out some other schedule issues, then clean the pistol and mags for real.
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