tim31 wrote:I shot pistols for the first time over summer. I'd fired rifles before, but had the chance to go to an indoor range and took it. I fired five different handguns; a .22 Ruger, a .38 revolver, a Glock 9mm, an M1911, and finally a Ruger Super Redhawk .44 magnum revolver. I was looking forward to the Colt .45 the most, being a service pistol with a lot of history, but I wound up enjoying it the least. It was loud, smokey, and kicked like Tim Cahill. The .44, which I'd feared, was easy in comparison. It goes without saying that the Glock was the easiest, and I achieved the best groupings with it.
Does this sound like a normal experience?
Yes. The Super Redhawk is a big, heavy, handgun with well-designed grips, and the .44 Magnum's pain potential has been greatly inflated by folk who probably don't know better. I find the .44 Magnum to be quite manageable and very accurate at 25 yards plus, and that's out of the comparatively lightweight Smith and Wesson with the stock
sandpaper wood grips.
The M1911 is a pistol whose original ergonomics weren't quite up to today's standards. GI-spec ones, with the full, skin-pinching, hammer and hand-biting grip safety were pretty awful (but compared with its contemporary semi-auto competitors, it was the ergonomics king.) Many blinged-out civillian models have bobbed hammers and wide beaver-tail grip-safeties, making them much more pleasant to shoot. And the accuracy potential of the M1911 platform made it
the base for the so-called "race guns" used by competitive target shooters.