Belt Fed
Ronin
I dunnoAre the corners sharp, or rounded? If the edges are sharp, you might be OK but if rounded you'll only be safe with Israeli carry (empty chamber).
I dunnoAre the corners sharp, or rounded? If the edges are sharp, you might be OK but if rounded you'll only be safe with Israeli carry (empty chamber).
I’m not saying there were misdeeds done in the Military contracts however “that said” there were/are plenty of bad optics.Sig should be more diplomatic in their responses. Being called “the Dan Crenshaw of gun manufacturers” by the 2A gun community is a hard smear no manufacturer wants to be saddled with, especially when they have big gov contracts. I’m a Sig owner and love those guns. I own other makes and they’re cool too.
Maybe the market upheaval could elicit a conciliatory overture from Sig. Sig haters won’t be convinced but fence sitters and customers, could be negatively influenced simply by a caustic lawyer’s belligerent memo. They’re a huge company (bigger than HK?) and took care of my 1st Gen MCX w/o me asking for help. Good rifle. Smaller companies tend to be on top of QC but Sig reached out to me.
My P320 is 10mm, so I’m curious to know if it’s excluded from this issue. I’m hoping my armorer (if he knows Sigs) will shed some light.
I sure hope yours is not affected...My P320 is 10mm, so I’m curious to know if it’s excluded from this issue. I’m hoping my armorer (if he knows Sigs) will shed some light.
THERE YOU GO!!Also if your that concerned over an Sig P320 supposedly issue, simple remedy………
View attachment 77368
Good post!! Thanks!I am privileged to call a lot of national level trainers friends. One is John Hearne and on his FB page tonight he has made probably the most rational statement I have seen in the whole debacle. He made it shareable so with his permission here is some screen shots.
Have you considered the 365?? It's solid and everyone who has shot them gives a good report.I've really never considered a Sig. I'm thinking about buying a 320 now though.![]()
Some valid points made, and some specifics that are missed (but brought up in the vids I posted). I'm thoroughly convinced that the real problem lies in the MIM'ed parts sourced from multiple 3rd world countries. When you have a specific and critical part (like a sear) that is coming from 2, 3 even 4 separate sources in different countries, you can have a QC nightmare...and it also explains why many 320's self-discharge and many do not. Once these components arrive at the Sig factory here in the USA and are assembled into the pistols, the end-user cannot possibly know where those critical compnents came from, or if the MIM'ed parts from a particular country are the problem. Having a double sear doesn't help as numerous cases and tests show that if the first edge fails to retain the striker, the 2nd won't catch it, either. All while holstered or otherwise not being handled.I am privileged to call a lot of national level trainers friends. One is John Hearne and on his FB page tonight he has made probably the most rational statement I have seen in the whole debacle. He made it shareable so with his permission here is some screen shots.
When I got my Sig 1911, it was the last year Sig used tool steel for the internals, no MIM, but now there all like most manufactures, they now use MIM, if MIM is done right, there’s no issue, but if not, there soft, MIM can only be surfaced hardened.Some valid points made, and some specifics that are missed (but brought up in the vids I posted). I'm thoroughly convinced that the real problem lies in the MIM'ed parts sourced from multiple 3rd world countries. When you have a specific and critical part (like a sear) that is coming from 2, 3 even 4 separate sources in different countries, you can have a QC nightmare...and it also explains why many 320's self-discharge and many do not. Once these components arrive at the Sig factory here in the USA and are assembled into the pistols, the end-user cannot possibly know where those critical compnents came from, or if the MIM'ed parts from a particular country are the problem. Having a double sear doesn't help as numerous cases and tests show that if the first edge fails to retain the striker, the 2nd won't catch it, either. All while holstered or otherwise not being handled.
What Sig OUGHT to do, going forward, is to fabricate these critical parts in the US and CNC them rather than use MIM. It would be better to add an extra $10-20 dollars to the final price tag than hemorrhage $$$ in legal costs. And although they apparently don't want to issue a recall under any circumstance (the so-called "upgrade" was offered as a voluntary repair because they've had so many dozens of lawsuits then & now that a recall would in the eyes of the courts and juries appear to be an admission of defects and therefore of guilt); they really need to put this issue to rest once & for all, for a plethora of reasons. They can call it a 2nd upgrade, call it whatever they like but they need to make it mandatory and simply swap out the existing critical components with CNC-machined parts.
At the end of the day, I believe that if Sig keeps jumping the shark on this issue, they'll eventually get a huge bite taken out of their collective ass. I say this with confidence because while Sig's legal stratagems have helped them in the past, enough users are being injured, crippled for life, and in a couple cases DIED from these UD's that juries are now deciding AGAINST Sig and awarding multiple millions of dollars to several of these plaintiffs.
A course correction also serves another benefit besides end-user safety. Fixing the root cause will moot the anti-gun Karens' arguments for repealing PLCAA, even if their arguments were valid. Take the wind out of their sails, and they will drift away!
Awrighty, I think we've beat this dead horse enough. The information has been presented, Arguments pro/con have been made and I think it's safe to say everyone has arrived at an opinion regardless. I think we can move on from this thread unless and until some earth-shattering breaking news happens.
I agree with you. I love my Sigs, but we shouldn't make excuses for a defective product.SigP320 Safety Problems Continue – Resulting In Bans from Police Training Ranges!
SEATTLE — The Washington State Criminal Justice Training Commission (WSCJTC) permanently banned using a popular police handgun at its facilities, citing evidence that the Sig Sauer P320 can fire without anyone pulling the trigger.
Unfortunately this will get little attention unless some assclown makes a totally sophomoric video and puts in YouTube whereupon the gun cognoscenti will run it up the flagpole.I am privileged to call a lot of national level trainers friends. One is John Hearne and on his FB page tonight he has made probably the most rational statement I have seen in the whole debacle. He made it shareable so with his permission here is some screen shots.
Well several legitimate pages on social media is sharing like Primary Secondary TDI out of Ohio and Rangemaster certified Instructors and similar. Of course usually only the serious trainjng and firearms folks follow those everybody else you can’t help. I mean we are still hearing advice against shooting specials in magnums and after a shooting to drag the bodies back inside your house and those have been old news for 40 years!Unfortunately this will get little attention unless some assclown makes a totally sophomoric video and puts in YouTube whereupon the gun cognoscenti will run it up the flagpole.
I have faith in the 320.Have you considered the 365?? It's solid and everyone who has shot them gives a good report.