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Post by Admin on Feb 7, 2016 0:24:16 GMT -8
The Sig is a great pistol, shoots well, but it has one draw back for me. The slide release sits far back, which is good for releasing the slide easily, but i tend to hit it either way I grip it. At first I would cause the slide not to lock back on the last round. So I readjusted my grip, then I locked the slide back by accident. The trigger is a great trigger very smooth, handles recoil well. The slide release did it for me, I now put it up for sale.
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Post by tater313 on Feb 14, 2016 16:05:42 GMT -8
I have shot Sig Saur p226 in the past, was amazed how well they shoot, let alone handle the 40 S&W round. After much debating I decide to purchase a 9 mm version. After the lame long 10 day hold and the 1-30 days wore off before I could dros. Finally I go to Brentwood Rifle and pistol and pick it up, drove straight to TRAP to the range to shoot it. I pulled it out off the box loaded the mags and started shooting, first few head shots slightly left, then I corrected dead on. I went to pull the trigger and no PEW, so I rack the slide and it locks back due to empty mag. I figured I hit the slide release, well even with readjusting my right thump it happened several times after that. When I get home I really work on my grip for the sig, much different from any other semi-auto pistol I have ever shot. So the next range trip my grip has my thumps under the slide lock, which then caused me to lock the slide back several times. So during the next week I had to make a hard decision, keep it or sell it, well I sold it. My muscle memory works well on almost all semi-auto pistols, except for the Sig. I can shoot the Sig well but I have to many hiccups through the process, overall it is a great gun, and is a little pricey, I believe you can save some money and buy other brands that shoot just as well, but for way less.
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