And.. you just proved my point for me!Absolutely! If one likes a plastic block!
Yeah but the safety is on the trigger finger!
My XDm is one of my "stashed" guns at home.
But a Glock 22 is my bedside gun.
My XDm is one of my "stashed" guns at home.
But a Glock 22 is my bedside gun.
Glock is what a Springfield XD and all it’s variants WISHES it was.
Purchased a Glock, tried it, didn't like it but it obviously has it's fan base just like the 1911 which I also purchased and did not like either. Beretta and CZ for me.
Funny, my XDM is my bedside gun.My XDm is one of my "stashed" guns at home.
But a Glock 22 is my bedside gun.
I think I have done this with every major brand. But I always end up with Glock again but I do carry a CZ RAMI BD which I do enjoy.
I loved Beretta until I shot one as a civilian then I really didn't like them anymore : /
Don’t have a glock, never shot a glock. So, I’ll ask this:
Other than “no cleaning for the first 10,000”, what are the details around the wet environment ops?
I know for a fact that stuff submerged in the ocean can withstand close to, if not more than 100 years of submersion without significant problems as there is no oxygen in that environment.
My question would be what measures were taken upon recovery before the weapon was fired. That isn’t clear from the article.
??? Huh? No oxygen? Water is one part H and 2 parts O. Fish gotta breathe...
Ever see a shipwreck? Metal bridge over salt water? Every untreated steel part swiftly rusts.