testtest

Army’s Sig P320 Derived Pistols Will Remain Unchanged After Concerning FBI Report

Talyn

SAINT
Founding Member
The U.S. Army is not taking any actions regarding its Sig Sauer M17 and M18 pistols based on the findings of a recently disclosed FBI report that has raised new concerns about the design’s ability to fire without the trigger being pulled.

ICE is the latest agency to drop the P320 amid un-commanded discharge concerns while Sig says it participated with the FBI in follow-up tests.

Sig has also refuted the results of the FBI’s initial evaluation, which it says the bureau was subsequently unable to reproduce using a mutually agreed-upon testing protocol.


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The U.S. Army is not taking any actions regarding its Sig Sauer M17 and M18 pistols based on the findings of a recently disclosed FBI report that has raised new concerns about the design’s ability to fire without the trigger being pulled.

ICE is the latest agency to drop the P320 amid un-commanded discharge concerns while Sig says it participated with the FBI in follow-up tests.

Sig has also refuted the results of the FBI’s initial evaluation, which it says the bureau was subsequently unable to reproduce using a mutually agreed-upon testing protocol.


View attachment 88719
This thread is far better then the last one
 
"unable to reproduce using a mutually agreed-upon testing protocol"

The Protocol:

Ultimate Safety Testing Protocol for Sig P320

Objective: Ensure maximum safety and prevent all operational hazards.

Step 1:​

📦 Do Not Remove from Box

  • Leave the Sig P320 in its original packaging.
  • Store in a secure, climate-controlled location.
  • Admire from a respectful, non-interactive distance.

Congratulations! The P320 has passed the “Zero Exposure Protocol” with flying colors. Risk of accidental discharge? Zero. Risk of mechanical failure? Zero.
 
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