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Tag "pistol"

With about 150 rounds through the Smith and Wesson M&P 9mm Shield, and a few days carrying in a new Praetor holster, we’ve had enough time to give our first impressions. The 9mm M&P Shield is similar to the rest of the M&P lineup, meaning it has a polymer frame, Melonite treated slide and barrel, and a striker fired action. The Shield comes standard with a non-ambi safety, which is small and well shielded which is nice as this compact pistol is likely to spent its life in a concealment holster tucked in close to the body. While we don’t feel a personal need for the safety, it’s nice to see it is positioned well enough on the frame to be difficult to accidentally engage. The pistol comes a both a 7-round and an 8-round magazine; the 8-round magazine is extended slightly to give the shooter a better handhold. The extended magazine is shown inserted into the weapon in the below images as it is the configuration we carried.

 Click the picture to jump ahead to the shooting portion of our overview.

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Glock, Inc. announced today that KC Eusebio will join Tori Nonaka as a second member of Team Glock, Glock’s competitive shooting team. Bringing Eusebio aboard as a full-time employee lays to rest rumors that Glock would move to a sponsorship-only support model after the recent departure of full-time, professional shooters Dave Sevigny and Randi Rogers.

From Glock’s morning press release:

Eusebio, three-time World Speed Shooting Champion and former United States Army Marksmanship Unit team member, brings with him significant accomplishments and experience.

Eusebio will join fellow teammate and renowned junior female shooter Tori Nonaka on Team GLOCK.  Like Nonaka, Eusebio was introduced to shooting by his father and began shooting competitively at the age of 8.  Quickly, Eusebio rose to Master class in two short years.  By the age of 12 he was, and remains, the youngest competitor in the world to earn the ranking as a Grand Master class shooter.  At 15, he became the youngest shooter to win a world championship at the prestigious World Speed Shooting Championships Steel Challenge. One of eight competitors ever to earn the USPSA Open National Title, Eusebio also boasts three Steel National Titles.

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Wilson Combat just released the super-compact 1911-style “Super Sentinel.” They are calling it the most concealable .38 Super automatic pistol on the market today. It’s a highly controllable round, it’s relatively inexpensive and easily available (in non-election years). I’m pretty much a 9mm guy, but the .38 Super is a great defensive round that does address a few of the 9mm’s shortcomings, most notably in energy delivered to the target.

Wilson says “loaded with quality defensive .38 Super ammunition, the Super Sentinel generates .357 magnum-level energy with every shot and exceeds the power of +P+ 9mm rounds with the reliability and match grade accuracy of the .38 Super cartridge. The Super Sentinel retains ballistic superiority over the 9mm Sentinel and launches a typical defensive load like Wilson’s 115 grain TAC-XP load at approximately 1250 fps.”

Well, I’d buy that argument, though I’m not ready to throw down $4,000. At first blush, 1250 fps isn’t all that special, but getting there without having to deal with piping hot +P+P loads is a — plus.

  • Price: $3,875
  • Calibers: .38 Super
  • Magazine Capacity: 8 rounds
  • Barrel Length: 3.6″
  • Overall Length: 7.2”
  • Sight Radius: 5.3”
  • Height: 4.8”
  • Width: 1.3”
  • Weight Empty: 25.2 oz.
  • Accuracy Guarantee: 1.5” at 25 yds.
  • Sentinel Aluminum Frame, 1/2″ Shorter Than a Compact
  • 30 LPI High Cut Checkered Frontstrap
  • High-Ride Beavertail Grip Safety
  • Tactical Thumb Safety
  • 3 ½# – 3 ¾# Crisp Trigger Pull
  • Contoured Magazine Well
  • G10 Slimline Grips
  • 3.5″ Carbon Steel Slide
  • Battlesight with Fiber Optic Front Sight
  • 3.5″ Stainless Match Grade Cone Barrel,
  • Hand Fit Full Length Guide Rod with Reverse Plug
  • Carry Cuts
  • Shown with Optional Fluted Barrel/Chamber
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Perhaps you thought there wasn’t anything left for the aftermarket to address on the Glock platform. Larry Vickers is proving you wrong by putting out a new magazine base plate. The new mag plate is wider, offering the ability for the shooter to more easily strip a stuck mag from the magwell. It’s also got a matrix of dots that can be used to number/identify a mag. No word on price or availability, yet. Thanks to Patrick Glean for allowing us to use his photos.

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Dan Lamothe over at Marine Corps times is reporting MARCORSYSCOM’s selection of the MARSOC pistol could happen by spring 2012. The contract authorizes the purchase of 400 to 12,000 weapons, though the current requirement calls for 4000 pistols for force reconnaissance and MARSOC Marines.

Officials with Marine Corps Systems Command, out of Quantico, Va., declined to characterize testing or identify which companies are competing for the contract. However, the Corps is in the final round of source selection, said Charles Clark III, head of weapons requirements at Marine Corps Combat Development Command, MARCORSYSCOM’s parent command. He declined further comment.

Read more from Marine Corps Times here.

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21stCentCatalyst
21st Century Gunfighter is releasing the Costa Catalyst, the first extended magazine release for Smith & Wesson M&P pistols today. We’ve had some time with it on the range and in the studio. The part is not simply a longer version of the stock mag release. 21CG worked with Chris Costa to refine the shape, angle and surface of the Catalyst and make it work seamlessly with the ergos of the pistol.

Since there aren’t any other M&P extended mag releases to compare this thing to, I’ll briefly relate it to an experience I had with using a similar part in another pistol. I have used an extended mag release on a gen3 Glock 19 and wanted to throw the pistol downrange after the third shot. The squared-off edges bit into my support hand and turned my range session into some kind of Catholic self-mortification ritual.

Not so with the Catalyst. Picking up the pistol, I noticed right away that the ergos were just about perfect. The button didn’t interact with my shooting grip. At. All. Even off-hand, the release didn’t interfere with my grip. Sure, this has a lot to do with the excellent design of the M&P grip, but 21CG could have easily screwed the grip up with too much button, sharp edges, or odd angles. The face of the Catalyst has a few wide serrations that create traction as you drive your thumb forward for the mag change. They don’t look like much, but they are aggressive enough and do their job well.

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During conversations with Glock representatives at SHOT Show, I asked about the beavertail backstrap that had been shown at SHOT the previous year. I had a particular interest in the product, as I had acquired one in March of 2011 while at the IWA trade show. A video with some shooting impressions can be found here.

I was told that there had been several minor changes made to the design since I had last seen it displayed by Glock. Most notably, a tiny protrusion now sticks out of the Glock frame, on top of the current “beavertail” area. A corresponding dimple has been added to the inside of the beavertail backstraps, allowing them to snap into place. They’re still held in place by the longer pin supplied with every Gen 4 Glock that is intended for use with the current non-beavertail backstraps, but this is intended as an added measure of security.

The other change to the system is that the beavertails are now being made in both medium and large sizes, as opposed to the previous large-only beavertail backstrap. For those who don’t recall the Gen 4 frame sizing system, a backstrap-less Gen 4 is 2mm shorter front to back than a Gen 3; the medium backstrap adds those 2mm back for a standard Gen 3 size, and the large backstrap adds another 2mm for those with larger hands or who prefer larger (longer) frames. In other words, the medium beavertail backstrap will give you a Gen 3 size frame, but with a nice beavertail.

The new backstraps will be available sometime in the middle of this year. They’ll be included with Gen 4s sold from that time as well as being sold separately for what I’m told will be a very reasonable price. The minor physical changes will not prevent them from being attached to older Gen 4 frames.

In the eleven months that I have been using Gen 4 Glocks with beavertail backstraps, I have found that the beavertail offers slightly greater control over recoil when compared to the frame without the beavertail. I still hold the opinion that the beavertail will be of most use to those who have fat hands and/or problems with Glock slide bite. However, I also feel that the beavertail is something that any Glock shooter should consider testing out, especially since it will soon be available for minimal cost.

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If you’ve heard of Swiss pistolmaker Sphinx, you’ve likely heard how expensive they are. The new polymer, aluminum and steel SPD is going to bring the price into the atmosphere while maintaining Sphinx’ hallmark quality and precision.
The SPD is a 9mm and will come threaded (shown) and unthreaded. The key feature is the full length aluminum frame that means full length rails for durable full slide-to-frame contact. Look for the SPD to hit US shelves this summer.

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The whole story is being reported in this week’s Marine Corps Times by my colleague James Sanborn. But, here are my thoughts on the Marines’ full fielding based on conversations with some well known trainers, as well as my own use of the Blackhawk SERPA holster.

It’s great that the Corps acknowledged the ageing design of the old M-12 holster and is replacing it so that Marines can stop spending their own money to get a decent retention holster. But buying a Level 2 SERPA for every pistol in the Corps’ inventory is, at best, controversial and, at worst, dangerous.

Aside from the obvious example of Tex Grebner shooting himself while drawing from a SERPA, there are other concerns about the safety and performance of the SERPA holster. Tex’s shooting could have been avoided with proper training, but the fact remains that a fairly experienced shooter faced with only self-imposed stressors shot himself on the draw. Sure, this could have happened with any holster, but I can’t ignore the holster’s design relying on the trigger finger for activation as a strong contributing factor.

Aside from the safety issue, there is a common thread of concern about pistols getting stuck in the holster. A roll in the dirt, gravel and even snow, get debris under the spring-loaded retention release button, jamming it closed and imprisoning the pistol. Kyle Lamb, former SFO-D member and president of Viking Tactics, tells me that he’s seen it jam in his classes, “when you get dirt in the mechanism it doesn’t work… It takes 2-3 guys pulling up on the gun to get it out of the holster.”

Here’s a video from 2005 of instructor Craig Douglas (A.K.A. Southnarc) from ShivWorks stopping a close quarters fighting class as a student and instructors struggle to free a training gun from a SERPA holster that was exposed to loose dirt.

Granted, Blackhawk did open the channel up a bit to allow trapped debris an easier path to exit, but doesn’t that allow an easier path to entrance, as well?

Who fights in dirt like that, some might say. So, a little Google-foo brings up the same issue but this time it’s in snow. I found this 2010 video on YouTube user Sturmgewehre’s “Military Arms Channel” and it demonstrates how easily the release mechanism can become jammed with fluffy white stuff. Skip to 1:46 for the goods.

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I don’t see why Blackhawk doesn’t cover the release button with a flexible cover to keep debris out. Boom. One problem solved.

I can maybe understand individuals buying SERPAs and taking them into combat after recognizing and training to overcome the quirks of their operation. But, this is a system that demands a lot of training. Giving them to everyone in the Corps without a strong training program in place to teach and reinforce the muscle memory required for safe use in stressful situations is asking for trouble.

Lastly, I’m sure a lot of you are wondering how Safariland’s holsters fared against the Blackhawk.

SYSCOM told Marine Corps Times the Blackhawk SERPA was selected after a series of tests to include integration and interference evaluation, dry-fire drills and live-fire drills but they didn’t elaborate on the other competitors nor the program requirements.

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While not explaining why, Glock USA just announced that it will trade your Gen4 recoil spring for an updated version “in order to ensure our products perform up to GLOCK’s stringent standards,” says the company.

Our guess is that it addresses a well documented issue with Gen4 pistols in which brass is extracted from the chamber, but not properly ejected. I’ll see if I can get more details, but for now you can go to Glock’s spiffy new website for information on exchanging your spring. Follow the spring exchange link on the lower, right side of the home page. Glock points out that the Gen4 G26/27 recoil spring is fine and is not part of the voluntary replacement program.

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