I purchased my first Glock 17 when they first came out, the ones with the full pebble grain finish on the frame with no finger grooves, etc. It was the first 9mm I ever owned and I bought it because the gun was such a novelty then. I eventually traded it for a G19, because around that time my dept. transitioned from 586 revolvers to the G17. That G19 was a great gun and if I ever get another Nine, that will be the one. But, I traded that for a G23 when the dept. went from 9mm to 40 (g22) and I am now also issued a G27 and owned a couple G27's. Our uniformed people just transitioned to the G22 4th gen and as soon as the 4th gen G23 comes out plain-clothes officers will get those. The RTF G23 was found to be too abrasive to clothing in a plain-clothes carry assignment, so we are waiting for the 4th gen.
My experience with Glock pistols has been positive. Like others have said, it is designed to be an efficient tool for its intended purpose and at that it excels. My only negative experience has been with the G27. I have never had one with less than acceptabile accuracy and reliability. But, my hand could never get happy with the grip and I always felt that the gun was going to jump out of my hand under recoil, especially in one-hand shooting stages. I tried various methods to rectify the grip with a grip extender and/or magazine extensions. But, this only resulted - IMO - of enlarging the gun to almost G23 size which defeats the purpose of the gun's existence. If I can carry an enlarged G27, I may as well carry a G23, right?
My advice then boils down to grip issues. If considering a sub-compact model like a G26,27 or 30 be sure you try to get an opportunity to fire one and see if the short grip causes any concern. Handling one and actually firing are two different things. If you are looking at a late model Glock with the RTF (rough texture frame) consider that if used as a CCW clothing abrasion could result.
One more thing to consider: Unlike those bone-headed times when you may have sold a S&W and immediately and continually regretted it, the same is not true with a Glock. Sell, trade, whatever. you can always get a dozen more.
My experience with Glock pistols has been positive. Like others have said, it is designed to be an efficient tool for its intended purpose and at that it excels. My only negative experience has been with the G27. I have never had one with less than acceptabile accuracy and reliability. But, my hand could never get happy with the grip and I always felt that the gun was going to jump out of my hand under recoil, especially in one-hand shooting stages. I tried various methods to rectify the grip with a grip extender and/or magazine extensions. But, this only resulted - IMO - of enlarging the gun to almost G23 size which defeats the purpose of the gun's existence. If I can carry an enlarged G27, I may as well carry a G23, right?
My advice then boils down to grip issues. If considering a sub-compact model like a G26,27 or 30 be sure you try to get an opportunity to fire one and see if the short grip causes any concern. Handling one and actually firing are two different things. If you are looking at a late model Glock with the RTF (rough texture frame) consider that if used as a CCW clothing abrasion could result.
One more thing to consider: Unlike those bone-headed times when you may have sold a S&W and immediately and continually regretted it, the same is not true with a Glock. Sell, trade, whatever. you can always get a dozen more.
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