If I recall correctly, both locations of Bill's Gun Shop had a wide variety of handguns to rent.
You might try renting a few different models and calibers and see what you shoot well.
mmcnx2 wrote:Try a bunch of types, sizes and calibers.
Then pick something you can shoot proficiently and if it is a toss up pick the one you like.
The last thing you should do is buy something someone else tells you need to carry.
hammAR wrote:besides you can always sell it here when you change your mind, like everyone else does..................
tazdevil wrote:Hey all, need to have opinions, have read some, but noticed a huge level of bias without supporting proof. I am considering getting a Sig P226 as my "first" gun (wife got a Beretta 92 as her first gun-I get to actually use it for now). The debate lies between these 3 though: The Sig, Glock, and S&W mp. Personally I'm not a big fan of plastic guns, nothing against those who like them, but I like the extra weight of the more all-metal types. Tends to help me hold the gun steadier-noticed that shooting my wife's Beretta 92. I know Sig and Glock have a strong reliability consideration on their side.
Second debate is 9mm versus .40? Economically, I know 9mm is the cheaper to shoot, as well as lower kick etc. I've had people say "9 is too small for home defense, I know people shooting the enemy in Iraq/Afg. with 9mm's that shot them 5-6 times and they were still coming." I do ask them if they realize what type of round the military uses-received some very interesting responses (I know they use FMJ's). After telling them they were required to use FMJ's, not HP rounds, they retort with "9mm HP still can't stop anyone" or some other comment of the sort. Personally, someone breaks into my house, the 12gauge is the first thing I'm grabbing anyway; you can still miss, but it makes one hell of a baseball bat if worse came to worse. That, and if I miss with the 12-I won't kill my neighbors.
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