My philosophy is, find a platform you like, no matter what it is as long as it’s a capable and reliable gun and train with it. Get proficient and efficient with it. I come at it more from a citizen self defender frame of mind than a competition shooter. But I think it would be the same.
Two great pistols. Does one offer a clear advantage? Only if you are justifying the cost :) Great review, keep shooting and I will wait for the next review!
Great question and yes I believe people give the advantage to the 2011 because of its weight and price. In real life...this just doesn't hold true in my grip. So, I'm calling snake oil. With that said, I still rather enjoy my shoot experience with my staccato even though I still prefer the Glock. Thanks for watching
the stacatto undeniably shoots flatter, and the trigger is undeniably faster stock, but if this dude got his glock trigger done, its hard to say. striker fire will always be slower than the 2011 trigger.
@@TruckManThings Hmm... I can't say the Staccato shoots flatter than my Glock if you observe the groupings when shooting doubles. I know it's because of my grip feeling better with the Glock. The Staccato does have a fast trigger after you dial it in. My stac trigger isn't stock and it's flat. My Glock trigger feels better on finger, it's flat, short to no slack and it's a bit lighter. This is why I can't give the belt to the my Staccato. It's not truly fair to compare a stock Glock to a stock staccato. With that said, there are pros and cons for both tools but for me the Glock wins in my comparison.
My philosophy is, find a platform you like, no matter what it is as long as it’s a capable and reliable gun and train with it. Get proficient and efficient with it. I come at it more from a citizen self defender frame of mind than a competition shooter. But I think it would be the same.
Respect...
@@Gypsyman40 Right back at ya, man!
Two great pistols. Does one offer a clear advantage? Only if you are justifying the cost :)
Great review, keep shooting and I will wait for the next review!
Great question and yes I believe people give the advantage to the 2011 because of its weight and price. In real life...this just doesn't hold true in my grip. So, I'm calling snake oil. With that said, I still rather enjoy my shoot experience with my staccato even though I still prefer the Glock. Thanks for watching
the stacatto undeniably shoots flatter, and the trigger is undeniably faster stock, but if this dude got his glock trigger done, its hard to say. striker fire will always be slower than the 2011 trigger.
@@TruckManThings Hmm... I can't say the Staccato shoots flatter than my Glock if you observe the groupings when shooting doubles. I know it's because of my grip feeling better with the Glock. The Staccato does have a fast trigger after you dial it in. My stac trigger isn't stock and it's flat. My Glock trigger feels better on finger, it's flat, short to no slack and it's a bit lighter. This is why I can't give the belt to the my Staccato. It's not truly fair to compare a stock Glock to a stock staccato. With that said, there are pros and cons for both tools but for me the Glock wins in my comparison.
You still running the Glock performance trigger with a JG Vex?
Absolutely, it has been a great setup once you master the feel.
whats your glock magwell?
Dawson Precision ice for the large backstrap