Posted December 4, 2017 10:30 am by Comments

By Chris Eger

The first really successful polymer-framed handgun, the Glock “Safe Action” pistol, hit the U.S. shores in the early 1980s and was a hard sell at the time– but times quickly changed.
In taking a look at Herr Gaston Glock’s original offering to the firearms market at large– the Gen 1 Glock 17, named such because of its then-mammoth 17+1 magazine capacity– Colion Noir was struck both in how little the overall functionality and layout of the gun have remained the same for almost 40 years, and by how much the little changes since then have tweaked the gun.
“I’d kill for some finger grooves right now. I’d kill for some RTF texturing right now– but besides that,” said Noir after shooting the gun, “But everything else is pretty much dead on.”
Glock designed the G17 originally for an Austrian Army contract– beating out traditional domestic handgun suppliers Steyr– for a run of some 25,000 guns adopted in 1982 as the Pistole 80 before making the leap to try the gun’s sales on the overseas market. When it hit the U.S., it gained a good bit of weird press as being a “porcelain gun made in Germany” and was derided as “combat tupperware” because

Source: Guns.com

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.