testtest

Review: Sig P211 by PewView

...I want this!!

Will this gun save Sig? (P211)

It’s a sweet shooter 😁
IMG_0853.jpeg
IMG_0845.jpeg
 
Why would you drop a gun in the dirt expecting it to go off only because its a Sig. moron. Any gun with a round in the chamber regardless of brand could have a potential to go off, even a gun with a hammer. Besides, sigs problem reaides with a hammerless firearm, not one with a hammer
Yeah, total cringe. All 2011-style guns are a variation on John M. Browning's perfect design. If it makes you feel better, that guy and his crew are Sig haters. The fact that they had to admit it's a good gun probably made them as butthurt as pooping out a raw ghost pepper!
 
Why would you drop a gun in the dirt expecting it to go off only because its an Sig. moron. Any gun with a round in the chamber regardless of brand could have a potential to go off, even a gun with a hammer. Besides, sigs problem reaides with a hammerless firearm, not one with a hammer
The P211 is a series 80, so it should be drop safe. 1911s all have the distinction of not being drop safe and 2011s depend on the brand.
 
The P211 is a series 80, so it should be drop safe. 1911s all have the distinction of not being drop safe and 2011s depend on the brand.
Not all 1911's. The series 70 were the ones that were guaranteed to fire when dropped. Springfield 1911's have been, from day one, designed and made drop-safe. Naturally, safety design is lacking in foreign-made firearms from places like, ...Turkey.
 
Not all 1911's. The series 70 were the ones that were guaranteed to fire when dropped. Springfield 1911's have been, from day one, designed and made drop-safe. Naturally, safety design is lacking in foreign-made firearms from places like, ...Turkey.

So much misinformation here.

Series 70 guns weren't "guaranteed to fire when dropped." They would fire when dropped on the muzzle, propelling the steel firing pin forward.

My Springfield series 70's don't have anything different than any other series 70. Why would you assume Springfields are drop safe?

My TISAS, however (one of many Turkish manufacturers, so I can't speak for all of them and not all of them produce @ the same level of quality or parts) came specifically with an extra power firing pin spring and a titanium (lighter) pin to make it more drop safe.

I'm also not worried about "drop safe" in the least... but that's a different story.

I didn't notice until then end I was responding to "Mr. Misinformation." Makes so much more sense now. I've remembered to add ignore so I don't see this tripe anymore.
 
Back
Top