curioushooter
Member
- Joined
- Apr 10, 2010
- Messages
- 22
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- 2
So based on your logic if someone actually like a .380acp Hi-Point they are uneducated?
Pretty much. Or they are penny-wise dollar foolish.
So when Jim Corely pulled out a Kel-Tec P32 and shot and killed a would-be attacker he was uneducated?
I guess it was better than a knife or a .25 Auto. Notice how it took a LONG time for it to kill the would-be armed robber, and I understand more than one shot was taken. Could have become ugly if the guy was tougher. Good thing for him it was a shaky handed teenager.
So when Rob Leatham uses his Springfield Armory XD Tactical for Production Class competitions he is uneducated?
Not too familiar with these pistols' internals, but I am sure they work when they are given to him for free (or nearly) by Springfield, Inc. I am confident, though, that the demonstrate every shortcoming of polymer that has been mentioned. I am sure that Bob Villa really believes that Craftsman tools are the best, too.
So when 8 time National Champion Bob Vogel uses one of several Glocks to win competitions he is uneducated?
As far as I know Vogel used 1911s before going to Glocks, which was mainly for their unusually raked grips, not because they were plastic. I like the feel of raked grips, too. The particular geometry of his hand or my hand may work better with this grip. One thing I dislike about Glocks in my hand (which is a pretty average hand by my estimation) is that the trigger is not in the crease of my finger. It may be different for others. Apparently Vogel likes the Glock trigger, which I don't. I think it is interesting to note where allowed he uses custom made metal magwells. If Glocks were steel to being with, would this be necessary?
Weaver was another pistol expert that liked longer DA revolver triggers! Cooper like short resetting single actions even though he was a big admirer of Weaver's hold. I can go on citing different experts of successful competitors with opposite opinions. I am giving mine and my reasons.
It is important to realize the arbitrariness of competition rules compared to the real world. I think the major/minor distinction in the ISPC is the most glaring one. Points should be directly related to some valuable metric like kinetic energy at the target or taylor KO at the target or something. When you try to infer conclusions about competitors' firearm selections, you must consider that what is important to them is radically different from what you think is important, because they are trying to maximize their effectiveness in a framework of somewhat arbitrary rules. A good example of this is that revolvers, which are seldom seen when auto-pistols are allowed to compete against them, make good house guns because there is no magazine spring that is left compressed for perhaps years and taking a "set." A revolver that has sat for 3 years loaded may have an advantage vs an auto-pistol that has sat for 3 years loaded. This is just one example. An educated shooter will almost certainly choose a different pistol for competition than he does for duty or for protection. He could have different reasons for all three choices. Or he may not. So the point is that it is a fallacy to point to some competitor and say: he does it so you are wrong or he uses this so it is good. The characteristics of the gun, game, and shooter have little to do with each other. My beef lies with polymer pistols and polymer pistol evangelists.
If someone can point to one advantage of polymer for constructing the frame of a pistol over stainless steel I would like to know.
The original topic here was that S&W was rumored to be phasing out their 3rd Gens (made of steel) and going to their plastics. Obviously the issue of steel vs. plastic is at issue here. I think the whole matter of the most recognizable American handgun maker phasing out their longest-developed line of steel auto-pistols is a reflection of greater problems within the shooting community and our civilization in general.
We all sadly know what happens when the decision makers change things. In the end you can't fight them because they redefine what is is. Manual transmissions and to a lesser degree RWD are not even available to those who know better because the herd followed the shepherd down the auto/FWD path (can you believe 50% of Corvettes are AUTOS!). I fear real steel pistols, which I greatly prefer, will be unavailable or at least deprived of support or interest if S&W does go this way, and I will do what little I can to prevent it (by getting on a soapbox). I hope I don't see the day when all steel pistols are outlawed because they are "magnetic" or something (I am sure they will think up something).
Unless S&W colludes with the hoplophobes again and shreds all the trade-ins.
Worried about it too! For the reasons I have stated.
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