Posted on 04/11/2023 1:21:01 PM PDT by NohSpinZone
That must be why my 1911 Colt has a lever on the back of the grip that has to be pushed in along with the trigger to fire.
It had a very minor drop problem, long fixed. People have been shooting themselves and blaming the gun since the days of muskets.
There are indeed documented incidents with this gun firing on its own, SIG blames it on defective firing pin spring...
I would not trust this gun, between the drop firing issue and this issue, this is not a weapon I would own.
There are more documented incidents of this model of gun self firing... Above and beyond the drop firing problem it has had.
I personally would not own this gun
But what Hilton said she also didn't realize at first was that the bullet had come from her own service gun, a semi-automatic pistol called the P320. It was still holstered inside her purse, according to the police report.That's either a failure of the holster or the pistol.
People have tested that. It doesn’t work. Your finger gets shredded. You can find videos of it on you tube.
Well, yeah. I wasn't thinking of them. I have two my momma used to carry.
Don’t own a striker fired pistol. I prefer the DA/SA autoloaders. Safe as a revolver.
Only if she is telling the truth. AND if the holster fully covered the trigger, and didn’t have anything inside it, and the gun really WAS holstered, etc.
Honestly? Someone carrying a gun INSIDE HER PURSE is dangerous! Ever look in a woman’s purse?
I dislike a lot of modern CCW guns. I like a double action pull of 8-12 pounds on a gun and dislike strikers. People ought to buy a gun that matches how they will carry it. I remain fond of J-frames and often carry one with an exposed hammer. But...I don’t believe the P320 is just shooting itself. The Alec Baldwin theory doesn’t work for me.
https://www.minutemanreview.com/sig-p320-safety/
Perspective from both sides of the issue:
“Not much detail is provided in any of those other claimed incidents, but a few stand out. For instance there’s Lieutenant Thomas Ahern who was was “performing a routine function (test) of his P320 when it fired at him without any force towards the trigger, resulting in the bullet impacting his left thigh.”
Who function tests their firearm 1) with a round in the chamber, and 2) when it’s pointed at an extremity?
And then there’s Gunter Walker, a civilian, who says his P320 fired on its own “when he placed the weapon down on his nightstand, shooting him through the palm of his left hand.”
Have you ever put a handgun down with your palm in front of the muzzle? Would you?
There’s also an un-named Texas gun shop manager who says a P320 fired “as he cleared the weapon, blowing off one of his fingers. The weapon was out of battery when it fired.”
First, clearing a loaded firearm with a finger over the muzzle doesn’t exhibit even cursory adherence to the Four Rules. Second, pardon us if we’re more than a little skeptical that the P320 in question — or any other handgun — fired when it was out of battery.
Again, these are examples the plaintiff in this case is using to support his claim that the P320 is prone to “un-commanded discharges.”...
...Then there’s the fact that the branches of the military have put the P320 design through their own batteries of testing and found it duty worthy. They have hundreds of thousands of P320s in regular service now and, despite a search, we couldn’t find a rash of reports of soldiers claiming their pistols are firing on their own.”
https://www.thetruthaboutguns.com/about-those-sig-p320-lawsuits/
“The Sig P320 cannot fire without the trigger being pressed unless this failure happens first”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZASNyzdEgx8
PS: I don’t own any Sigs.
I’m wondering what sort of holster she was using.
I can easily see an Uncle Mike’s letting something in to tangle with the trigger.
While you can argue the intelligence of doing anything with a gun pointed at you, this doesn’t change the fact this model of gun has several documented cases where it has discharged without a trigger pull or even a hand near the trigger.
That doesn’t even get into the fact this model of gun would fire when dropped.
I would not own this gun, if you choose to that is certainly up to you. But any firearm that has confirmed documented cases where it has fired without the trigger being touched, as this gun has (and this isn’t related to the drop fire problem this model has, and the manufacturer originally denied as well, until a few you tube videos appeared showing that indeed if it fell at a particular angle it would discharge very time), it is not a gun I want to own.
You are welcome to own it if you choose to, but I will not.
Amen! My 1911 in Condition 1 never went off by itself.
“But any firearm that has confirmed documented cases where it has fired without the trigger being touched...”
An accusation by someone filing a claim is NOT “documented”. And I don’t own ANY Sigs. I can afford a Ruger, not a Sig.
Exactly!!
It’s very common today for popular semi-autos to have no separate safety. Most just have a “safe action”.
Yeah, I’m not going to put sarc tag on a post that is blatantly comedic.
You might be surprised how many people believe that shyt.
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