![]() ![]() Consider spending money on professional training with your current gun, whatever that may be. Meanwhile, practical handgun owners - people who view their firearm as nothing more than a defensive tool - are well advised to divert their eyes from the Gen5 magic feather. Well, eventually not all Gen5 parts are backwards compatible with Gen4 and previous. If you don’t have a GLOCK-brand GLOCK, you’d be forgiven for wanting to jump on the GLOCK train at Gen5 to own the best handgun for custom modification - given the ginormous number of aftermarket parts providers. But you sure ain’t gonna get your modification money back at trade-in. (Thomas Edison was delighted when his Menlo Park lab burned down.) You might not. If you have upgraded these bits and pieces on your current gun, buying Gen5 puts you right back at GO. If you already have a GLOCK and haven’t upgraded to night sights or a better trigger, grippier grip, more efficient holster, more expensive range/carry ammo, match grade barrel or maybe a red dot, that might be a better “investment” than buying a new, bone-stock Gen5. There are better ways to spend your money If it ain’t broke, don’t upgrade it? Like that.Ģ. And will continue doing it for the foreseeable future. It’s not broken, in danger of being broken or worn out. What more do you want from a GLOCK?įaster reloads? A more accurate barrel? A more durable finish? An end to those pesky finger grooves? I seriously doubt you cursed Gaston’s gang for not building your GLOCK Gen 1,2,3 or 4 with a flared magwell, Marksman Barrel, nDLC finish or grooveless grip.įace it: your current GLOCK is just fine. And when it does, your GLOCK-brand GLOCK will send a bullet - any bullet of the correct caliber - down the barrel with more-than-merely-adequate accuracy. Provided you’ve loaded your current GLOCK, it will go bang when you squeeze the trigger.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |