by jp8775 on Mon Feb 03, 2014 1:50 pm
Here is my feelings, I hope I never ever get into a shoot out with any mouse gun. I am going to assume the other guy won't have one so he will be at an advantage to me if I do. A mouse gun is better than nothing if for no other reason there are hundreds of cases where the guy ran at just the sight of a gun. All guns "except some peoples" malfunction. I would find this hard to not get most people to agree on. In most cases (not always)the bigger the gun and the more it cost usually does equate to a better all around gun in a gun fight. Small guns are no fun to shoot for vary long in one sitting, this equates to less training and then to less proficiency all around. No two people will agree in a what gun is better argument as it is too subjective for that reason I use the gun magazines reports, but also look to see how many adds are running in the issue for that particular gun. I once notice that a magazine was trashing a gun left and right, there was not one add for that gun in it. But then they were loving a gun in another report so much I thought they would need room. There was 6 adds for the gun in that issue. So with that in mind you need to be careful. What I do rely on is the hundreds of students I see a month and what they are shooting and how does it function. I feel that's a good indicator. That takes me out of the opinion. It becomes really just fact. A good gun should function as designed with some leeway as to grip and operator proficiency. If you are trying to get some one to buy your gun as their first gun they are most likely not going to be proficient. Those are the guns I like, one that the student says I have only shot a hand gun once and this one is new and I never shot it. (good test right). There is another issue, no one wants to admit they picked a loser. Especially when they do not have money to buy a winner now. For this reason I do not answer in my class what's a bad gun with a brand. I say go to the internet and see how any pages trash it, that's a good indicator to look further into the gun prior to a purchase. That is also why I have dozens of different guns for students to try if they want in private before they buy a gun and are stuck with it.