I fail to see why Glock was even brought up during this discussion. There's a BIG difference between the two companies.
Glock actually did something meaningful. Sig has not.
Glock actually did something meaningful. Sig has not.
I got banned from Sigtalk for pointing out how silly that was.Sig is now suing the Washington State Patrol for banning the P320 from their training facilities. Nice...
It did stray off topic.I fail to see why Glock was even brought up during this discussion. There's a BIG difference between the two companies.
Glock actually did something meaningful. Sig has not.
You mean sell it and by a Glock?
I ran the Portland Police Bureau's Asian Gang Unit in the late 1980's. That agency adopted the Glock 21 shortly after I left. The unit's sergeant was leading a side-handle baton (PR-24) practice session, and on a reverse spin his baton struck the side of the holster. There was a loud bang; the sarge was furious, thinking someone had thrown a firecracker at him. The team was stunned and silent until one of them said, "Well, I dunno Sarge, but your holster is smoking." It seems the side blow had jarred the cruciform plate. Yeah, I know, impossible for the gun to discharge, but it did, in front of a half-dozen police witnesses. And Glock did make a change, though I don't know what that was. A detailed examination of the gun, remaining ammunition, and holster showed no defects in any. This incident was related to me by one of the officers who was there.Glock may be a paragon of safety and reliability today but they had early issues too.
I know for a fact that some police issued early Glocks discharged in the holsters. And Glock covered it up too, issuing a voluntary product upgrade when a full stop and recall was needed.
Maybe there is an old Portland Oregon cop out there in forum land that can back me up on this.
Anyway........
I think of hammer fired guns as mechanisms. By their nature they are simpler and inherently more safe.
Example: you can see a cocked hammer and an engaged safety on a 1911. That gives me a certain level of cautious comfort.
I have even more comfort with my double action revolvers knowing that the hammer has to completely cycle back and forth to fire the the gun.
Striker fired guns to me are more akin to contraptions.
By and large they are ready to fire without any visual indication of readiness (or lack thereof) and they rely of a series of springs, levers, cams and plungers to keep them from blindly, inadvertently discharging.
Add a highly flexible frame into that unholy mix and you can see where the trouble starts.
Bump an old fashioned mouse trap with you foot and see what happen next.
Striker fired handguns are here to solve the "problems" of hammer fired handguns.
I just don't see what problems they solve.
That was a great feature about the P99 that I had. Also, there was a video of a guy on another YouTube channel that was able to get the 320 to go off with nothing in the trigger just by moving the slide. He pulled up and to either side and but he really reefed on it. Still though it went off with a primed case in the chamber. I will try to find it it.Just a couple of thoughts here. Pertaining to the "do not lubricate" the striker assembly. What do they mean by this? Do they mean anywhere on the striker or just the engagement points? What if water gets into the striker? Water can act as a lubricant can it not? If a lubricated striker can work its way off its safety shelf, or ledge that is a HUGE concern and points to a design flaw in and of itself. How does anyone guarantee that oil does not migrate from other areas of the pistol to the striker shelf? This is a BIG red flag that proves Sig knows there is a problem with their striker system. No one, absolutely no one can guarantee oil doesn't get into the striker of their pistol, let alone something like water. Come on people, wake up!
I watched someone take a P320 apart and work the safety lever on the striker. The safety lever moved out of the way of the striker almost immediately upon trigger movement. This is important because the striker is free to move forward with almost no movement, or very little movement, of the safety lever. Why wouldn't you design this striker block to come away from the striker at the very end of trigger movement instead of at the very start of trigger movement. This makes no sense to me at all!!! This is one of the most unusual designs I have ever seen and I have seen a lot of designs at my age.
Lots of pro-Sig people like to flaunt the fact Sig has never been found to be a fault in any of the law suits against them and their P-320 pistol. While that may be true, there have been numerous reports of out of court settlements with non-disclosure agreements put in place. I find that to be the same as admitting guilt, in order to avoid unwanted publicity of a trial. It is also a way of hopefully saving a big dollar award after the trial. If Sig is such a stand up company why don't the publish a list of law suits they have had filed against them and the results of said law suits? And all out of court settlements should be included on this list.
Here is the kicker, the procurement of a firearm by a law enforcement or military organization is many times more complex and underhanded than we know. Some manufacturers have been known to "give" certain items to an agency that selects their firearm. In other words if I were the Anytown Police Department and I selected the Acme Firearms company's 9mm pistol for my department, as part of this purchase the Acme Firearms Company "gives" me any number of their rifles as a "gift" for making the purchase. Do you think for one moment that these "gifts" don't play into the purchase decision? Now suppose one of the handgun manufacturers trying to have their handgun selected by Anytown PD doesn't have a long gun in their product inventory, does that put them at a disadvantage in the selection process? I'll let you the reader be the judge of that, but I think it is a dirty sales tactic. It could potentially lead to the procurement of a less desirable item.
As I said before, this is all about money and Sig is no different than anyone else in this area. They are far too quick to suggest these "un-commanded" discharges are the fault of the user, or holster. Police officers and I suppose AF Security Police aren't weapons specialists, but they aren't stupid either. The P-7 pistol although beautifully made, was a poor design for law enforcement. Dare I say the P-320 is following the same route. Every time there is an "un-commanded" discharge of a P-320 it is another nail in the coffin for Sig. Dancing around the issue isn't helping anybody and puts more lives in jeopardy of injury or death. In my opinion no striker fired pistol should use a completely tensioned striker spring as a normal mode of carry. Partially tensioned would be acceptable as long as the striker cannot detonate a round from its at rest position. Perhaps that was why I liked the old Walther P-99 and Smith and Wesson P-99 that you could de-cock from a fully tensioned striker to partially tensioned at the push of a button on the slide. And lastly any firing pin block or striker block should not move completely out of the way until the very last movement of the trigger. Along ramble for sure, but I am done. I fear this issue will not go away or get better soon.
Rick H.
You are correct, but as someone else pointed out. This was 30 years ago, and the way Glock handled it was much better than sticking their head in the sand as Sig has done. Playing the blame game! Although after the USAF tragedy they did put out a better letter saying they were going to work with investigators in finding the cause. Call me skeptical, but isn't it common for an Arsonist to insert themself in the investigation? And no I do not have a foil hat! LOLSorry, but in Portland in the late 80's or early 90's a Glock 17 went off in the holster during baton (PR 24) training when the baton hit the side of the holster on a back swing. No fingers involved.
There were other incidents too, but that is the one I had a personal connection to. Portland cops and Anchorage cops used the same (labor issues) law firm and the lawyers therein put pressure on Glock for remedies
If such things did not occur, why was Glock forced to redesign the part they call the cruciform and recommend they all be replaced?
Look it up.
As armorers we expedited the new parts asap and upgraded all the Glocks our guy and gals were carrying. The redesigned parts had a different color finish so that you could tell the difference.
Like Elmer Keith said.... Hell, I was there.
Just last week an Air Force Strike Command Sgt died after removing his Sig M18 and setting it down on his dell, still in the holster. He walked around to his chair and sat down. The Sig discharged hitting him in the chest, killing him. The U.S. Air Force immediately removed ALL Sig P320 platforms pistols from service until Sig can explain/correct this design flaw. Sig has done nothing but deny responsibility. There are well over 100 well documented, and filmed accidents like this, including Law Enforcement, Military, ad Civilians. Sig Lawyers are going to deny the Company into bankruptcy. I would guess that Sig will lose all military contracts if they continue denials.This didn't age well…
The difference, of course, being that Smith & Wesson immediately recognized and acknowledged the problem, and fielded a definitive solution in a very short amount of time. Sigg sour has chosen to lie, to conceal and inflame the situation at every turn.Reminder the Sig mishap is not a new story. The design of the Smith & Wesson Victory Model (Model 10) was modified in 1945 to include an improved hammer block after a sailor was killed by a loaded revolver discharging when accidentally dropped onto a steel deck. Many don't consider pre-war Smiths drop safe, and carry the hammer on an empty chamber.
Now you say it, I do remember that being a habit. (Hammer on empty chamber) Obviously, I never personally witnessed this because I am too young. Damn! Never thought I could call myself young again at 62! LOLReminder the Sig mishap is not a new story. The design of the Smith & Wesson Victory Model (Model 10) was modified in 1945 to include an improved hammer block after a sailor was killed by a loaded revolver discharging when accidentally dropped onto a steel deck. Many don't consider pre-war Smiths drop safe, and carry the hammer on an empty chamber.
No it would not. At least not in the cases where the gun is firing from jiggling the slide or from vibration. Most shooters don't understand that the purpose of the Glock style trigger safety is actually a drop safety feature. It is designed to stop trigger movement if the gun is dropped onto the rear of the slide. Without the trigger safety, if the rear of the slide is impacted during a drop, the combined mass of the trigger and trigger bar will cause that assembly to move rearward from inertia. As per the laws of physics, "objects in motion will remain in motion until acted on by an outside force," anything not rigidly fixed in all axes on the gun will continue moving in the direction of the drop until something arrests its momentum well after the gun stops from impact. If the combined mass of the trigger and trigger bar are greater than the combined resistance of spring pressure, friction, and the resistance of other parts they activate, the trigger will continue moving rearward when the gun is dropped against the rear of the gun and fire the gun. The trigger safety's mass is less than its reset spring pressure, so it cannot depress during a drop and the catch on the back of the trigger safety contacts the edge of the frame, preventing trigger movement from a drop. Sig elected to simply reduce the mass of the trigger to prevent this from happening instead of installing a trigger safety.I wonder would a trigger safety like the Glock eliminate the problem? They make them after market. They are available.
Having carried an M9 with an empty chamber, empty mag well, and 2 loaded mags as a contractor under contractor ROD I'll mildly suggest this is a policy solution to a training problem.On the carrying with a round chambered issue, one of the reasons the British switched from Brownings to Glocks was this very reason. They ordered empty chambers on the High Powers for safety reasons. But, disengaging the safety and racking the slide takes time. With the growing concern of green on blue shootings they looked for a handgun that would allow safe carry with a round in the chamber. Time saved is lives saved. They chose the Glock. That happened in 2013.
Yes, I agree that this will be an obvious rebuttal to the video, but the salient point is that the screw did not move the trigger to the point of sear break. No mechanically sound gun should ever fire without the trigger fully depressed to the sear break. Granted, his case would have been even more compelling had he been able to demonstrate the gun firing from simply jiggling the slide and nothing else. That said, the screw applying pressure to the trigger without moving it fully rearward simulates how small the margin of safety is in at least his sample P320. It demonstrates the catasrophic potential of what could happen if slightly out of spec parts are used, as has been theorized. No well designed firearm should ever be that "touchy;" there should always be a much greater margin of safety. That is inexcusable engineering on the part of Sig.My problem with the video and the screw is that he continues to say that he was not touching the trigger, but the screw simulated him putting pressure on the trigger. ANd to top it off he began to place the pistol in a holster when it "went off" with the screw in place. Not a Sig fan and I have no idea how the Airman's pistol went off when holstered in a Safariland holster with a QLS.
You make very salient points. Quality is now, in the future, and always has been a Management responsibility. As fish rot from the head, one needs to start the trouble shooting effort there. Management made the decision to adapt an existing design (hammer-fired P226) to a different platform (striker-fired), use MIM produced in lieu of more precise stamped parts to reduce costs. Sig was virtually giving the pistol to the Army.First of all, the presence of oil, that is commonplace and not only accepted but recommended on every other firearm on the market, should not cause these problems. That statment in the manual is a boilerplate CYA measure so they can always fall back on that bs. Secondly, the problems with the gun thus far presented have nothing whatsoever to do with excessive lubrication or lack thereof; it is solely due to poor design and sloppy execution. Oil has no influence on parts being out of spec or using dumbass ridiculous design elements solely to be different and so you don't look like you're copying competitors. Third, if your gun is that sensitive to the presence of oil, something that is supposed to be a part of regular gun maintenance, then you have a sh!t design.
Sig was once a respected manufacturer of very high quality firearms, and now they have become a disgrace with their irresponsible, callous attitude towards the safety of their customers, their lack of proper engineering work, and their pizz poor QC. IMO, this P320 debaucle needs to send a permanent message that criminally substandard work, complete disregard for their paying customers, and arrogance will severely hurt their bottom line. People within that organization need to be fired if not held criminally liable for gross negligence.
And I was as big a Sig fan as ever existed prior to this.
Or GlockFirearm safety rule #1:
Treat every firearm like it's an Sig Sauer P320.
It's all over about an Air Force NCO being shot and killed by one a few days ago. The AF has apparently banned them pending and investigation. But you prob know this by know.This didn't age well…
I am very curious about your statement in regards to the P7 pistol which I am assuming was the squeeze cocker made at one time by HK. If this is correct could you give me some detail on what defects there were with this design? I am only asking for my own knowledge.Just a couple of thoughts here. Pertaining to the "do not lubricate" the striker assembly. What do they mean by this? Do they mean anywhere on the striker or just the engagement points? What if water gets into the striker? Water can act as a lubricant can it not? If a lubricated striker can work its way off its safety shelf, or ledge that is a HUGE concern and points to a design flaw in and of itself. How does anyone guarantee that oil does not migrate from other areas of the pistol to the striker shelf? This is a BIG red flag that proves Sig knows there is a problem with their striker system. No one, absolutely no one can guarantee oil doesn't get into the striker of their pistol, let alone something like water. Come on people, wake up!
I watched someone take a P320 apart and work the safety lever on the striker. The safety lever moved out of the way of the striker almost immediately upon trigger movement. This is important because the striker is free to move forward with almost no movement, or very little movement, of the safety lever. Why wouldn't you design this striker block to come away from the striker at the very end of trigger movement instead of at the very start of trigger movement. This makes no sense to me at all!!! This is one of the most unusual designs I have ever seen and I have seen a lot of designs at my age.
Lots of pro-Sig people like to flaunt the fact Sig has never been found to be a fault in any of the law suits against them and their P-320 pistol. While that may be true, there have been numerous reports of out of court settlements with non-disclosure agreements put in place. I find that to be the same as admitting guilt, in order to avoid unwanted publicity of a trial. It is also a way of hopefully saving a big dollar award after the trial. If Sig is such a stand up company why don't the publish a list of law suits they have had filed against them and the results of said law suits? And all out of court settlements should be included on this list.
Here is the kicker, the procurement of a firearm by a law enforcement or military organization is many times more complex and underhanded than we know. Some manufacturers have been known to "give" certain items to an agency that selects their firearm. In other words if I were the Anytown Police Department and I selected the Acme Firearms company's 9mm pistol for my department, as part of this purchase the Acme Firearms Company "gives" me any number of their rifles as a "gift" for making the purchase. Do you think for one moment that these "gifts" don't play into the purchase decision? Now suppose one of the handgun manufacturers trying to have their handgun selected by Anytown PD doesn't have a long gun in their product inventory, does that put them at a disadvantage in the selection process? I'll let you the reader be the judge of that, but I think it is a dirty sales tactic. It could potentially lead to the procurement of a less desirable item.
As I said before, this is all about money and Sig is no different than anyone else in this area. They are far too quick to suggest these "un-commanded" discharges are the fault of the user, or holster. Police officers and I suppose AF Security Police aren't weapons specialists, but they aren't stupid either. The P-7 pistol although beautifully made, was a poor design for law enforcement. Dare I say the P-320 is following the same route. Every time there is an "un-commanded" discharge of a P-320 it is another nail in the coffin for Sig. Dancing around the issue isn't helping anybody and puts more lives in jeopardy of injury or death. In my opinion no striker fired pistol should use a completely tensioned striker spring as a normal mode of carry. Partially tensioned would be acceptable as long as the striker cannot detonate a round from its at rest position. Perhaps that was why I liked the old Walther P-99 and Smith and Wesson P-99 that you could de-cock from a fully tensioned striker to partially tensioned at the push of a button on the slide. And lastly any firing pin block or striker block should not move completely out of the way until the very last movement of the trigger. Along ramble for sure, but I am done. I fear this issue will not go away or get better soon.
Rick H.
Could you tell me which "generation of Glock" had the defective sears? I remember several years ago my glocks which were made in the 80's had a recall (upgrade) in relation to the passive firing pin safety not working right. I did test my Glocks and the passive firing pin safety appeared to be working and was told if I sent them back in to be retrofitted I would get a much heavier trigger pull. Should I have sent them back in?Some folks don't remember the very early Glock "updates" that occurred several years ago. Due to tolerance stack-ups there were pistols that had situations where the cruciform sear was releasing the striker while still in the holster. Thankfully the striker safety plunger was doing it's job and I only recall a couple of incidents where the gun actually discharged. The biggest issue when this happened, was that you would draw the pistol to put it to work, and would have a "dead" trigger. I was a Glock LE rep back then and Glock called for an "update" vs a recall and we were sent out hundreds of update kits for all of the models, which included a new striker, trigger/ trigger bar, a striker safety plunger and spring, and an extractor plunger and spring. The whole idea was to increase the amount of sear engagement. We ran into a few issues where there was so much engagement, that if you pushed down on the slide toward the frame,(closing up that tolerance) the striker wouldn't release at all. We even had a cut away backing plate so we could visually see the amount of engagement. I still have a pretty large box of those kits, which I use for spare parts.
That is a good one! I sure don't know what Sig's strategy is. There are a number of accounts of un-commanded discharges. I have read two reports, one from USMC and the other from the State Police Academy, that give me the willies. Sig is taking a hard stance that the gun isn't at fault. In fact Sig is suing the Academy on the issue.Firearm safety rule #1:
Treat every firearm like it's a Sig Sauer P320.