DarkJoker33
NES Member
I'm honestly curious about the xdm elite osp pistol.Looks more like they're trying to get away from the stain/stench of the XD line.....
There has to be a way to pin the grip safety though
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I'm honestly curious about the xdm elite osp pistol.Looks more like they're trying to get away from the stain/stench of the XD line.....
So you'll stick to your usual forum etiquetteThis gun gets 0/5
I will forever make fun of people that buy it.
If you own a Shield, .40, Taurus or an Echelon.So you'll stick to your usual forum etiquette
Of course there's a way to pin it but there's also the obvious problem where you may be compromising things like drop safety if you do....I'm honestly curious about the xdm elite osp pistol.
There has to be a way to pin the grip safety though
It still has a trigger dingus.Of course there's a way to pin it but there's also the obvious problem where you may be compromising things like drop safety if you do....
It still has a trigger dingus.
You don't notice them i had the gen 1 it was nbd. I have meat hooks for hands tho there was no way i couls get a grip on it without pressing the safety eitherI'm honestly curious about the xdm elite osp pistol.
There has to be a way to pin the grip safety though
This is a real gun
Agreed, you've got me curious now. I'll check my xd tonight. I'm assuming the grip safety allows the trigger to be pulled and pulling the trigger disengages the firing pin block but I honestly have no idea, I never really thought about it.Of course there's a way to pin it but there's also the obvious problem where you may be compromising things like drop safety if you do....
Agreed, you've got me curious now. I'll check my xd tonight. I'm assuming the grip safety allows the trigger to be pulled and pulling the trigger disengages the firing pin block but I honestly have no idea, I never really thought about it.
?The best thing about this new gun is its sheer originality. It's not derivative at all.
Waiting for a polymer Borchardt.
You missed my invisible sarc tag.?
It's very much inspired by the SIG P320. Striker fired with the same sort of fire control unit. It has some differences (Glock style trigger dingus) and a better optic mounting system. But the FCU is definitely inspired by the P320.
watching a bunch of reviews of this. the gun they mention is glock actually. as usual, after 45+ years they're still chasing the plastic gun that has had to have no modifications to keep up. the only thing sig and springfield can do is do the chassis gimmick. look everyone, buy me and you can add dozens of frames to the mix. everytime you make a change, this time pulling out the fire control group to install into another frame, you have a recipe for a, god forbid, malfunction at an unwanted time. but a good marketing department knows you need something to reel in the fish...i mean attract customers. just gonna mention, i still own my first ever glock 17, bought in 1991. still going strong without missing a beat. i will admit to a feed/extraction malfunction in 1994. i remember specially cause i was living in colorado. an armorer with the wisconsin state patrol, who i befriended on a aol glock board walked me through the repair over the phone (he sent me replacement parts) and it's been running since. same parts i put in are still installed. ok, i've extolled the virtues of glock for the week. won't mention how great the innovator of the polymer pistol is again this week.Seems they are going after Sig's 320 line with this one.
You have a very good point!All guns are good no matter who makes them
. Hooray for gun manufactures sill making guns for the United States because if you blink this could be gone.
Just watched the 5 min gun collective review and with the slow mo shots, it looks like there is wicked pic rail flex under firing conditions.If this was inspired by the P320, will it also fire when dropped and blow up frames?
The macro by sig is really an amazing gunwatching a bunch of reviews of this. the gun they mention is glock actually. as usual, after 45+ years they're still chasing the plastic gun that has had to have no modifications to keep up. the only thing sig and springfield can do is do the chassis gimmick. look everyone, buy me and you can add dozens of frames to the mix. everytime you make a change, this time pulling out the fire control group to install into another frame, you have a recipe for a, god forbid, malfunction at an unwanted time. but a good marketing department knows you need something to reel in the fish...i mean attract customers. just gonna mention, i still own my first ever glock 17, bought in 1991. still going strong without missing a beat. i will admit to a feed/extraction malfunction in 1994. i remember specially cause i was living in colorado. an armorer with the wisconsin state patrol, who i befriended on a aol glock board walked me through the repair over the phone (he sent me replacement parts) and it's been running since. same parts i put in are still installed. ok, i've extolled the virtues of glock for the week. won't mention how great the innovator of the polymer pistol is again this week.
You have a very good point!
All of my guns except my Italian Beretta 92S are all made in the US