I have a Glock 19 and I had a smith an Wesson 686 plus which I loved but I was noticing the cyclinder was having a hard time opening up when I took it home to work on it I seen the ejector rod was coming loose so I cleaned snugged it up put another box through it same thing so I sold I know how to work / build guns but I’m not in to the buisness of that I do miss it so I’m going to go with the smith an Wesson 686 6 shot see if I get better results
Smith and Wesson 686 plus was junk ejector rod kept coming loose sold with only 150 rounds through it I tried tightening it with a tool just to be sure it wasn’t me doing something wrong
I don't know about 100% reliability with a revolver. My 4.25" Python needs to be cleaned every couple hundred rounds, or it will start doing funky stuff. Vs my Glocks will run a couple thousand rounds before they start acting up. Revolvers are reliable if cleaned often.
This is true. With the 357 if you mix between 38 special and 357 they are definitely tricky because of the different case lengths and burn patterns. I was referring to if you had to use them in some type of defense scenario. Hujdreds of rounds should not be fired. Lol. Thanks for watching.
@WerdeLicht I have a 686 amd a 586. Both are no dash older ones. Maybe try to track down an older one and give that a shot. I think I would have gotten my money back as well. They are not cheap. Very disappointing
Who would own even one glock much less two? I am guessing that none of the people wanting a gun for 'defense' say are a cop or in the military or a cartel hit man. I will say it... Capacity does not matter to you. Make your choices based on that fact. Lots of cops carry/carried glocks. they miss 9 out of 10 times (100 shots fired 1 hit) The glock does........not........point...well. Simple as that. Grab your glock point it without using the sights. using something like a laser? You will miss... well... 99 out of 100 times? you will miss. You can not afford to miss in that situation. the .357? tied with the 44 mag for my favorite.... but... I think you need to look at the J frame .357 guns. Small and powerfull and accurate... Win/win/win
Not sure how much that comment is sarcastic so I am gonna take it to mean that you agree with me 100% Or.. if you don't right now? It won't be but a few years until you do@@TerryBenton
Thank you.. that is exactly my point! of course you can get used to any angle. obviously tho the human body would prefer an angle that points like your finger. Sooooo all my guns point. The angles are the same pretty much except an old Ruger Mk1 which is not a 'point and shoot' gun in any case. Soooo you teach your body to point naturally and then.... because you are shooting a glock.... you have it 'adjust' Or... you learn to shoot on every other gun and just take it for granted that unless you are point blank you are just gonna miss when you have a glock in your hand and you are not using the sights. Personally? I do not want to contaminate my muscle memory by even picking up a glock. If you have never point shot your glock you will be seriously bummed out the first time you try.... or....If you have learned to make that (large) adjustment? Probly you will be frustrated when you pick up a real fighting handgun.@@InfBerBat143
Man I love ur 1911
Thank you!
I have a Glock 19 and I had a smith an Wesson 686 plus which I loved but I was noticing the cyclinder was having a hard time opening up when I took it home to work on it I seen the ejector rod was coming loose so I cleaned snugged it up put another box through it same thing so I sold I know how to work / build guns but I’m not in to the buisness of that I do miss it so I’m going to go with the smith an Wesson 686 6 shot see if I get better results
Get an older one. The ones without a lock on the side
Smith and Wesson 686 plus was junk ejector rod kept coming loose sold with only 150 rounds through it I tried tightening it with a tool just to be sure it wasn’t me doing something wrong
The one in the video is an older one
I don't know about 100% reliability with a revolver. My 4.25" Python needs to be cleaned every couple hundred rounds, or it will start doing funky stuff. Vs my Glocks will run a couple thousand rounds before they start acting up. Revolvers are reliable if cleaned often.
This is true. With the 357 if you mix between 38 special and 357 they are definitely tricky because of the different case lengths and burn patterns. I was referring to if you had to use them in some type of defense scenario. Hujdreds of rounds should not be fired. Lol. Thanks for watching.
My 586 L-comp does fail, i sold it. My Mod.13 works perfect.
That is an older no dash 586 in this video. I personally have never had a problem with it but anything can fail I guess
@@TerryBenton yes, my new 586 (with keyhole) failed out of the box.
@@InfBerBat143 that really sucks. I hate to hear it man
@@TerryBenton I have to correct myself, I didn't sell the revolver, but got the money back from the dealer.
@WerdeLicht I have a 686 amd a 586. Both are no dash older ones. Maybe try to track down an older one and give that a shot. I think I would have gotten my money back as well. They are not cheap. Very disappointing
Totally disagree with your analysis of these platforms, calibers, effectiveness
No offense intended
Ricky from IBM
Thank you for watching
Who would own even one glock much less two? I am guessing that none of the people wanting a gun for 'defense' say are a cop or in the military or a cartel hit man. I will say it... Capacity does not matter to you. Make your choices based on that fact. Lots of cops carry/carried glocks. they miss 9 out of 10 times (100 shots fired 1 hit) The glock does........not........point...well. Simple as that. Grab your glock point it without using the sights. using something like a laser? You will miss... well... 99 out of 100 times? you will miss. You can not afford to miss in that situation. the .357? tied with the 44 mag for my favorite.... but... I think you need to look at the J frame .357 guns. Small and powerfull and accurate... Win/win/win
Right
Not sure how much that comment is sarcastic so I am gonna take it to mean that you agree with me 100% Or.. if you don't right now? It won't be but a few years until you do@@TerryBenton
The grip angle is just a matter of getting used to it. If you only use a Glock and then pick up a 1911, the 1911 seems strange.
@@InfBerBat143 I see your point. Thabks for your input
Thank you.. that is exactly my point! of course you can get used to any angle. obviously tho the human body would prefer an angle that points like your finger. Sooooo all my guns point. The angles are the same pretty much except an old Ruger Mk1 which is not a 'point and shoot' gun in any case. Soooo you teach your body to point naturally and then.... because you are shooting a glock.... you have it 'adjust' Or... you learn to shoot on every other gun and just take it for granted that unless you are point blank you are just gonna miss when you have a glock in your hand and you are not using the sights. Personally? I do not want to contaminate my muscle memory by even picking up a glock. If you have never point shot your glock you will be seriously bummed out the first time you try.... or....If you have learned to make that (large) adjustment? Probly you will be frustrated when you pick up a real fighting handgun.@@InfBerBat143