
I took them both to my club’s range and after firing them, I was not very impressed. One paid only $217 through a price match at a Academy, which was cheaper than the best online prices at the time. Both of my sons-in-law just recently bought G2’s. And from all accounts, the G2 is much improved over the 1st Gen Millennium. Taurus used to be a quality firearm at a good price. Hopefully you don’t have a bad experience, but Taurus unfortunately isn’t what they used to be back in the day. Such close-minded fanboys seem to have become the norm online, so it’s refreshing to see someone accept the comments of others as constructive feedback. A lot of people get online and tout their favorite thing (whatever it is) with bold statements like you originally made, and then vigorously defend their argument despite all evidence to the contrary. I must commend you on your attitude George. With an MSRP of $614 it’s the most expensive underrated gun here, but the 2075 RAMI is well worth the money. But this helps control recoil resulting an extremely easy gun to keep on target. Well, okay, the RAMI’s 26-ounce weight makes it a rather porky pistol. It comes complete with a 10-round flush and a 14-round extended magazine, all swaddled in those palm pleasing CZ 75 ergos.
#SUB COMPACT 9MM MANUAL#
We’re talking a hammer-fired, DA/SA, aluminum frame firearm with a manual safety or a decocker. While the 2075 RAMI is something of a niche gun, owners love it and for good reason. With one six-round and one eight-round magazine, interchangeable grip inserts and tritium sights, the $492 P290 is a nicely priced alternative to the more popular pistols. The SIG P290’s surprisingly easy to shoot accurately.

Its nine pound, double-action-only trigger is silky smooth, while providing an extra margin of safety and “re-strike” capability. The P290 is the Harry Houdini of SIG’s extensive pistol line, invisible to far too many could-be purchasers.Īt just 3.9 inches tall, 0.9 inch thick, and 16.4 ounces light, the P290 is smaller and lighter than those aforementioned pistols.

With MSRPs in the $469 neighborhood, I’m surprised the Walther PPS isn’t more popular.

If I lined-up the GLOCK 43, S&W Shield, Springfield XD-S, and a Ruger LC9, I’d put good money on 90 percent of shooters turning in noticeably tighter groups with the Walther, thanks to its ergos and trigger. The PPS M2 made a good thing even better with PPQ-like ergonomics and grip texture, a standard “American-style” magazine release, and a generally smaller profile (for reduced printing). The original Walther’s PPS is a highly concealable, accurate, shootable little carry gun.
