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What to do?


dhook

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Posted (edited)

My situation: I'm looking for my first carry weapon. I have watched so many U-Tubes and read so many different forums about the following guns that I'm no where nearer a decision than when I first started looking.

I have narrowed my choices down to a PM9 - SR9C - Kimber Solo

I realize the solo is hard to speak to because of its relative newness.

Any thoughts, advice, or best yet, real life experiences with any of these would be appreciated. Especially if you have shot or compared any of these.

Edited by dhook
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Posted

One possibility is to go to a range that rents pistols and try out a few to see what you like. Everyone has a preference toward a certain gun. It's hard to guess until you get to shoot one. Any of these you picked are good quality. What is comes down to is which one suits you and feels best to shoot. Good luck.

Posted (edited)

Just my 2 cents, but of those three, I'd go with the Kahr. It's light and all the bugs should be worked out by now. The Kimber's new and subject to having some kinks. The Ruger is the heavier of the three and probably would require holster carry, where as the the other two are small enough and light enough to stick in a pants pocket.

Edited by Moped
Guest 6.8 AR
Posted

If you want to hook up at Southside, sometime I'll let you try anything I have.

You might end up buying some ammo if you fall in love with one, but

I wouldn't worry too much. Tentatively will be at Stones River this Friday, but

may go by Southside in the afternoon. I don't have any of what you may have

narrowed down to, but Glocks, Sigs and a Springfield will be there.

Posted

I appreciate your offer 6.8 but its taken me a long time just to narrow it down to these 3.

Guest Bronker
Posted
I appreciate your offer 6.8 but its taken me a long time just to narrow it down to these 3.

What was your criteria on which you narrowed down to those three? I see some leaning toward subcompact / pocket tendency.

Of those three, I've owned the Kahr PM9. In fact I've owned three. I carried one tonight actually. My wife carries one every day.

I carry the Kahr in a pocket when OWB of my Glock 19 is not feasible (i.e. church).

Posted

Yes Bronker guess I should have said that. All three are great pocket/IWB candidates.

Guest That Guy
Posted

I would try my very best to shoot any, or comparable handguns if you can.

Kahrs are fine handguns, but are a very tight fit. They require at least 250 rounds of break-in and more attention to cleaning/lubricating. Further, due to their tight tolerances, they MAY be more likely to malfuntion (Feed, Extract, etc..). That said, I often carry a PM40 as a B.U.G. They carry great and are reasonably accurate once you acclimate to the trigger. However, they are not a "range-gun." You will likely shoot just enough to feel confident with it. Fifty rounds, let alone 250 rounds, is taxing on the shooter.

I also carry a 5" Kimber quite often, and I love it! However, I hear Kimber "suggests" several time in the manual to run "premium" ammunition at all times. To me, that is code for possible feeding issues. Personally, I would hold off on the Solo until some of the first-movers put it through the ringer. It will likely be a nice ultra-compact, but Kimber has had quality assurance issues in the past and there is not much room for error in this tight mouse-gun. Also, it is so new there will not be many options as far as leather to carry it in.

I would go with the SR9c. That is because you can shoot it at the range mostly all day. It is not too taxing and pretty accurate. I carry a G27 about 50% of the time, and for its size (very comperable to the SR9c) it shoots accurately and is fun to shoot. The gun is not stellar in many respects, but it is accurate for CCW, there are some good options for IWB and OWB, accessories are a little more widely available, and Ruger makes some tanks; I would not be as leery about malfunctions with the SR9c as I would be with the smaller and tighter guns. The drawback is pocket carry is out.

That is the way I see. I hope my opinion helps.

Good luck.

Guest NashvegasMatt
Posted

The one thing i don't see, is the presence of any Springfield xd subcompacts, or smith&wesson m&p subs..... any particular reason? I think you may want to search sr9c and check the most recent thread on it... there some valid points made both for and against it. Me personally, my XD.40 subcompact is a dream....and I have had a pleathera of different IWB carries. the solo... ehh, its hard to say, but you know the quality will be there because it's a kimber. It's kinda of pricey, but if you've got the money to spend, it's going to be a kimber or kahr over the ruger any day of the week. Just keep in mind, while on the topic of money, that a $800 weapon and a $450 are going to be significantly different in quality, some more than others....and that's the nature of the beast.

Guest friesepferd
Posted

So many people when wanting to find a carry gun start off by looking at all the different spiffy guns. I highly suggest before you look at any specific gun, you first right down your requirements for it. From there, we can tell you which guns meet your criteria. I have always found that once you specify everything that you want before looking at specific guns, you often end up finding that only a very small few actually meet all your criteria. You may not care on some of these issues, but most of them you should. I so often see people comparing a few guns that are all so completely different.

Answer these questions for us (assuming you want semi-auto. I guess really that’s the first question):

1) Price Range

2) Action (single, double, double/single, stricker-fired, LDA, etc)

3) safeties (prefer non, prefer a thumb safety, don’t care if it has a thumb safety but do want something (such a trigger or backstrap), or if you want a thumb safety, do you care if it flips up (beretta) vs flip down (1911))

4) doublestack vs single stack: double stacks are thicker and harder to conceal, but hold a lot more bullets

5) barrel length (you probably can conceal anything, but a 3-4" is easiest)

6) weight (the heavier the lesser the recoil, but also... the heavier)

7) material (mostly related to above. steel is heavy. both Al-alloy and polymer are light)

8) grip length (more important than barrel length or thickness for concealability)

9) overall size- related to grip length, thickness, and barrel length- but its more than juts that. some gun just overall are a lot more smaller and concealable, but for a price)

10) caliber (smaller = quicker to shoot and more accurate for a lot of people. smaller = more ammo for everyone. bigger = more bang. just depends on what you like best)

11) color -(yes this really can matter. Some people want shiny bitone, some require all back for a carry gun, some just love that OD green)

12) other tidbits - do you want a chambered indicator? Do you want nights sites (you can get for any, but some come with them)? Are you going to want a laser grip? Do you want a rail to attach a laser or light to?

13) trigger (similar to action, but is different. can it be a long pull as long as it has a short reset, or can it be long as long as its consistent, or do you want short and crisp, or long light followed by a short crisp at the end... some people really have a big preferance here... I happen to be one of them)

14) tolerances - i put this here instead of accuracy and reliability. In my opinion, the tolerances are the difference here. When you are talking about a well made gun (which of course some aren't, but most people here wont be recommending them), they are all.. well made of course. Some guns (1911) have tighter tolerances. This means they are more accurate, but sometimes that also means more finicky. A looser gun (glock) is known to be more reliable, but less accurate. Keep in mind however, that with any well made gun, it is probably a lot more accurate than you are. Don't think that a 1911 is going to jam up on you... thats not true. Its more just that you may need to know what ammo doesnt work, and make sure your gun in clean. This is simply a preference thing. Both options are good options, and the large majority of guns out there are somewhere in between.

Once you have all these questions answered, most likely you will have it narrowed down to a very small amount of very specific models of guns. From there, go feel them. See what fits best in your hand, and if you can, shoot them and see which you shoot best.

Guest friesepferd
Posted

So many people when wanting to find a carry gun start off by looking at all the different spiffy guns. I highly suggest before you look at any specific gun, you first right down your requirements for it. From there, we can tell you which guns meet your criteria. I have always found that once you specify everything that you want before looking at specific guns, you often end up finding that only a very small few actually meet all your criteria. You may not care on some of these issues, but most of them you should. I so often see people comparing a few guns that are all so completely different.

Answer these questions for us (assuming you want semi-auto. I guess really that’s the first question):

1) Price Range

2) Action (single, double, double/single, stricker-fired, LDA, etc)

3) safeties (prefer non, prefer a thumb safety, don’t care if it has a thumb safety but do want something (such a trigger or backstrap), or if you want a thumb safety, do you care if it flips up (beretta) vs flip down (1911))

4) doublestack vs single stack: double stacks are thicker and harder to conceal, but hold a lot more bullets

5) barrel length (you probably can conceal anything, but a 3-4" is easiest)

6) weight (the heavier the lesser the recoil, but also... the heavier)

7) material (mostly related to above. steel is heavy. both Al-alloy and polymer are light)

8) grip length (more important than barrel length or thickness for concealability)

9) overall size- related to grip length, thickness, and barrel length- but its more than juts that. some gun just overall are a lot more smaller and concealable, but for a price)

10) caliber (smaller = quicker to shoot and more accurate for a lot of people. smaller = more ammo for everyone. bigger = more bang. just depends on what you like best)

11) color -(yes this really can matter. Some people want shiny bitone, some require all back for a carry gun, some just love that OD green)

12) other tidbits - do you want a chambered indicator? Do you want nights sites (you can get for any, but some come with them)? Are you going to want a laser grip? Do you want a rail to attach a laser or light to?

13) trigger (similar to action, but is different. can it be a long pull as long as it has a short reset, or can it be long as long as its consistent, or do you want short and crisp, or long light followed by a short crisp at the end... some people really have a big preferance here... I happen to be one of them)

14) tolerances - i put this here instead of accuracy and reliability. In my opinion, the tolerances are the difference here. When you are talking about a well made gun (which of course some aren't, but most people here wont be recommending them), they are all.. well made of course. Some guns (1911) have tighter tolerances. This means they are more accurate, but sometimes that also means more finicky. A looser gun (glock) is known to be more reliable, but less accurate. Keep in mind however, that with any well made gun, it is probably a lot more accurate than you are. Don't think that a 1911 is going to jam up on you... thats not true. Its more just that you may need to know what ammo doesnt work, and make sure your gun in clean. This is simply a preference thing. Both options are good options, and the large majority of guns out there are somewhere in between.

Once you have all these questions answered, most likely you will have it narrowed down to a very small amount of very specific models of guns. From there, go feel them. See what fits best in your hand, and if you can, shoot them and see which you shoot best.

Guest m&pc9
Posted

Its easy. Just buy one of each. Enjoy

Posted

I would add the Kahr CM9 to your evaluation. It's new so that could possibly be considered a negative. It begins shipping on 3/21/2011.

According to Kahr's website it is the extact dimensions of the PM9 for 2/3 the price.

Posted

Great input guys! Very informative. I can't help but wonder how many more people out there like me are looking for a compact EDC right now and cant decide. I received a PM about the M&P9C and that I should take a closer look at it too.... So off to the U tubes!!

Guest Domestic
Posted

Get a Glock or M&P. Best quality for price your going to find.

Posted
Get a Glock or M&P. Best quality for price your going to find.

i agree, the Glock 26 was my first carry gun. Solid has a rock. Another TGO member is still enjoying it to this day. I have a m&p full size that has severed me well this winter. However, don't overlook the PF-9. Its not for everyone and gets mixed reviews but if find myself carrying it more than anything else. It simply disappears under a t-shirt (important to me in the summer.)

Guest 10mm4me
Posted

The Kimber is extremely unreliable. The Kahr would make a great carry gun. I don't care for Ruger autos, so no opinion on that. You would be much better served with something along the lines of an XD 9 or G19.

Guest FiddleDog
Posted

Of the three, I'd suggest the sr9c. It has a great trigger and also has the ambi manual safety that can be a real plus to a first time carrier ( it takes a while to get used to carrying hot ). It can also dbl as a range/ bedside gun with the 17rd mag.

Posted

For all around use (range/carry) and once you factor in how cheap the Ruger SR9c's are going for these days its really the best choice for a 1st carry gun. I like Kahrs but the PM9 is expensive and not much of a range/target weapon. The Kimber solo is too new to trust with your life imho so its out until some feedback comes in.

Guest BenderBendingRodriguez
Posted

You could also wait for the CM9 to go ahead and get released. Essentially the same as the PM9, but quite a bit less expensive.

Posted

The best option would require that several guns be available to fire and see which is most comfortable to you.

Posted

Once again thanks for all the input. I decided...believe it or not to spring for the S&W 9c. Got it at Buds for 413.00. FFL 30 bux. Smith and Wesson has a $50 dollar rebate till mar 31 for military and retired military. Pretty good deal and couldn't pass this up.

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