i thought the same with the dangling finger, but actually it feels right. my coworker has a baby eagle 9mm and my pinky just has enough room to have something to be on, but not enough room to actually make it gripable. so thats annoying, my finger doesnt know what to do. when i held the glock, dangling it felt just fine. the MP9 also felt the same way, like ti was normal.I've never handled one. I've heard they are extremely reliable like most Glocks. I dare say they make ideal purse guns for petite lady hands (shoot me).
But I'm confused as to how comfortable it would be with my little finger dangling. Plus from what I've heard, the extended mag with the extra finger notch can pinch a bit and be annoying when used over and over at the range.
I think the unseasoned gun user may be tempted to use their middle finger on the trigger.
Glock generally goes for ergonomic design and to me, this design is lacking ever so slightly in the ergo department.
I may well be wrong. Next time I'm in Academy I'll ask to hold one and if I am wrong I will return and sing it's praises. Who knows? Maybe I'll buy one.
If it's reliable it's good value for the price. I just don't fancy buying one. I want a handle that I can get my whole hand on. For me, stability is reliability.
I've never handled one. I've heard they are extremely reliable like most Glocks. I dare say they make ideal purse guns for petite lady hands (shoot me).
It wasn't a sexist remark but I guess it may have been slightly prejudiced to assume a woman who has smaller hands would prefer a smaller gun.Why would a lady want/need a smaller grip than a man? Small grips amplify felt recoil. Larger grips (within reason) give a better contact ratio for the hands as long as the trigger is still reachable.
There's plenty of ladies shooting uspsa with full size and double stack pistols. They ain't complaining as they out shoot most of us mere mortals.
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