Posted on 09/07/2012 8:30:03 PM PDT by ExSoldier
The US Military switched to the Beretta M-9 after extensive testing and that is what they use nowadays, although I believe some special forces use Sigs and maybe the USCG as well.
If you can find the testing results that the US Military did on Google, it’s a long document but an interesting read.
It’s also what finalized my decision to make the M-9 my first firearm purchase around 1990 or so.
Some of the early models had slide failures at about 15,000 rounds due to the open slide/ejection port design on the Beretta M-9, which was a result of using high pressure ammunition that exceeded Beretta recommendations and the average before failure is now at around 35,000 rounds since the slides were redesigned to accommodate +P ammunition and other high pressure rounds.
Also, the Military M-9s must be built in the US according to the bid, which is the main reason Beretta, one of the oldest companies in the world, opened a plant in Maryland to manufacture M-9s and their variants, so the M-9 is not built at the Beretta plant in Italy.
The Beretta family has been building and manufacturing firearms for about 500 years now and I think they are pretty good at what they do and deliver a top product at a reasonable price.
BTW, most of the above is written based on memory, so I may not be 100% correct on some of the numbers, but I’m very close.
I’ll try to find the article on google and post the URL
bmfl
0.45 inch = 11.43 millimeter
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