The Savage Rabbit
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- May 22, 2006
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Although I have carried a 5" Smith & Wesson 629 Classic in .44 Mag. this past weekend in Tejon, the heavy Smith tended to pull my pants down just a bit too much for my comfort. That's why the Glock has me thinking that it would be a better all around field gun. The Glock design makes for a great camping, hiking, and carry pistol while hunting. It's poymer frame makes it a light weight arm to carry. The frame is not likely to scratch even if it is skipped across gravel like a rock on a pond. The Tennifer finsih on the slide is reputed (I've heard) to be one of the toughest finishes on the market.
However, the gun is also dead reliable and reasonably accurate. When loaded with 180 grain FMJ .40 loads it is a great all purpose out doors pistol. The G23 is compact, lightweight and when loaded with 180 gr. FMJs moves at about 980 fps. I think that should penetrate deeply enough for a general field pistol (not a primary hunting arm). However, I don't think I'd carry a .40 S&W into tall grass after pigs.
If the Glock 23 .40 S&W is a good field pistol, the Glock 20 in 10 mm would be a great field pistol. Packaged in the same light weight indestructible polymer frame and topped with the same diamond tough tennifer coated steel slide, the Glock 20 is the Glock 23’s Super Id. The G23 strikes me as the sensible work-a-day pistol that does an adequate job with not a lot of flash and fuss. The Glock 20 is the experiment in “what if.” What if we could put more horses under the hood? What if we could put more gigabytes in an iPod? What if Evil Knievil could jump 30 school buses? The G20 is the end result of Glock’s “what if.”
The G23 tosses a 180 grain bullet at 980 fps. The G20 slings, in the 10 mm’s original Norma recipe, a 200 grain bullet at 1200 fps - not once, not twice, but up to eleven times before the slide locks open. NRifenbark crunched the numbers a while back and opined that that is in the .41 magnum class. Why build a semi auto pistol with that kind of power? Because I can’t think of a better pistol to carry into thick oak scrub after a wounded wild boar or, when not hunting pigs, for making eleven potentially dangerous cinder blocks go snap, crackle, pop.
On the other hand, the Smith is sure is puuurty. Just my two cents. I saw a lot of guys carrying sidearms this last weekend. What are your opinions?
However, the gun is also dead reliable and reasonably accurate. When loaded with 180 grain FMJ .40 loads it is a great all purpose out doors pistol. The G23 is compact, lightweight and when loaded with 180 gr. FMJs moves at about 980 fps. I think that should penetrate deeply enough for a general field pistol (not a primary hunting arm). However, I don't think I'd carry a .40 S&W into tall grass after pigs.
If the Glock 23 .40 S&W is a good field pistol, the Glock 20 in 10 mm would be a great field pistol. Packaged in the same light weight indestructible polymer frame and topped with the same diamond tough tennifer coated steel slide, the Glock 20 is the Glock 23’s Super Id. The G23 strikes me as the sensible work-a-day pistol that does an adequate job with not a lot of flash and fuss. The Glock 20 is the experiment in “what if.” What if we could put more horses under the hood? What if we could put more gigabytes in an iPod? What if Evil Knievil could jump 30 school buses? The G20 is the end result of Glock’s “what if.”
The G23 tosses a 180 grain bullet at 980 fps. The G20 slings, in the 10 mm’s original Norma recipe, a 200 grain bullet at 1200 fps - not once, not twice, but up to eleven times before the slide locks open. NRifenbark crunched the numbers a while back and opined that that is in the .41 magnum class. Why build a semi auto pistol with that kind of power? Because I can’t think of a better pistol to carry into thick oak scrub after a wounded wild boar or, when not hunting pigs, for making eleven potentially dangerous cinder blocks go snap, crackle, pop.
On the other hand, the Smith is sure is puuurty. Just my two cents. I saw a lot of guys carrying sidearms this last weekend. What are your opinions?