Guys, I'm doing my "due diligence" in the hope of purchasing a viable 9mm, semi-auto, striker-fired pistol, to be used for CC AND home defense. I am new to the pistol world and this will be my first pistol purchase.
I have researched and handled many of the popular options, but I seem to always come back to the M&P 9 full size pistol.
My question: Is the M&P 9 full size a good CC/home defense option for a first-time gun owner? If so, manual safety or NO manual safety?
Thanks for your insights, guys.
A lot of good information in the thread to chew on, and I'll try to give my perspective on your question. I don't think the M&P FS9 is your best option for both CC/HD. I think it would be a good choice for home defense, but to me, it's just too large for an all-around CC gun.
Sure, some guys pull it off, but you will end up not carrying the gun much because it's just too big. That is not a good CC situation! A good holster definitely helps (Milt Sparks VMII are great), but again, the FS9 is tough with light clothing. I'm tall and in shape, and it's still tough to conceal that size gun.
The guys telling you that you are better having the right tool for the job are correct. You'd be better off with two separate guns, or get a smaller one if you insist on having just one. An M&Pc just makes much more sense for a combined Cc/HD gun. Not the right forum to say this, but the Glock 19 is an excellent dual purpose choice, and the one I chose over the M&P. I still own the M&P, but it sits in my safe. I'd also choose a Glock 17 over the FS M&P...
You said the G19 was too small for you. Do you have huge ham-hands and it just doesn't work for you, or is it that you just prefer a little larger grip handle? I prefer a little larger grip myself, but make the smaller ones work in order to have a good concealed carry gun. I find with the G19, the grip is actually a decent size for how concealable the gun is... It really is a good size/firepower/CC combo.
As for safety, or no safety, IME it's all a matter of practicing with what you have; you can make anything work. For carry, I prefer no external safety. I usually go with a Glock or a DA/SA gun, but also carry a Colt Defender.
For nightstand/bedside gun, I believe an external safety is good option. With a CC, your gun is safely secured on just your body, in a holster, and trigger access is only possible when the weapon is drawn from the holster. This limits potential for AD, and provides the fastest shot without stumbling with a safety lever during a sudden encounter.
For HD, the gun is either sitting on your nightstand or in a drawer in your nightstand, either in a holster or just by itself/no holster. In this environment you need to either draw the gun from the holster with two hands, or reach for and grab the gun, possibly in the dark, possibly in a sleep-confused state. With a striker-fired gun, I would want the safety lever as a positive step to help ensure no ND. Picture fumbling around reaching for the gun n in a drawer, or on the dark, or pulling it out of the holster in an awkward two-handed style. Potential for having your finger go where you don't want it, when you don't want it is there... I suppose getting an M&P with a safety gives you the option of engaging the safety, or not.
Hey, different things work for different people, for a variety of reasons. There is not real "right," or "wrong" answers here, just different opinions from people that generally have experiences to back up those opinions. I always try to be open minded about really listening to those experiences.
Good luck with your choice, and post a picture!