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Defects in NYPD handguns [Glocks jamming]
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS ^ | Tuesday, August 20th, 2002 | BOB KAPPSTATTER and ALICE McQUILLAN

Posted on 08/23/2002 2:24:12 PM PDT by archy

Defects in NYPD handguns

Half subject to jamming

By BOB KAPPSTATTER and ALICE McQUILLAN
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITERS

Tuesday, August 20th, 2002

More than half of the Police Department's handguns are subject to jam without warning, a potentially dangerous flaw that can leave the weapons as "useless as paperweights," police sources said. Although the jamming is rare, the NYPD has been concerned enough to order a recall of 24,000 semiautomatic Glock handguns so they can be refitted.

This problem affects the Glock Model 19S - the gun carried by about 60% of the department's 39,000 officers. The flaw, in which the shell casing fails to eject, has only arisen during practice and tests at the NYPD firing range, police officials say.

"Our studies have shown this to be a rare occurrence," said police spokesman Chief Michael Collins. "In the worst-case scenario...we estimated that this has happened only once in 450,000 times when fired."

However, during an actual gun battle in Brooklyn, two Emergency Service Unit officers reported that their Glocks failed. Collins said that after an investigation of the October 2000 incident, ballistics experts said whatever problem those guns had, it was not the jamming malfunction that is the subject of the current recall.

To correct the problem, the Austrian-based Glock company has sent engineers to the NYPD's firing range at Rodmans Neck in the Bronx. Since June, they have repaired 3,200 weapons in a procedure that takes about an hour. Immediately afterward, officers tested the refitted weapons at the range, where the results have been excellent, Collins said. The process will continue until all 24,000 Glocks are fixed, he said.

There is a delay in fixing all the weapons, sources said, because cutbacks and the redeployment of officers to special details have made it difficult for cops to schedule time to have their guns repaired.

Sources also said that some of the Glocks have a different problem - locking. When a gun locks, a user can get it functioning again by removing the clip holding the ammunition and manually moving the slide to eject the stuck shell casing.

In that scenario, the source said, "You can be back in the gun battle in a matter of seconds, as opposed to the total jam where the guns become [as] useless as paperweights."


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; Government; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events; US: Georgia; US: New York
KEYWORDS: banglist; cops; donutwatch; glock; jam; malfunction; nypd; phasethree; rhodesia
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To: Double Tap
The one and only IDPA match I've ever been to had a mix of guns, but by far the Glock was most prevalent, followed by the 1911.

Not just IDPA. I shoot at three different ranges in the local area. Competition, training and just plain plinking at paper targets. And the vast preponderance of semi-auto handguns I see are Glocks.

Now most of these people are civilians, but the outfit I train with is run by LEOs, and this group absolutely swears by them.

The State of California is down on Glocks for two reasons: 1) The state doesn't like the lack of an external safety and 2) Glock didn't cave in and cut a deal with the Justice Department to avoid the liability lawsuits the Clinton regime tried to ram down the industry's throat.

California just loves Smith and Wesson, for obvious reasons, and mandates them as the standard duty weapon for a lot of LEO agencies.

41 posted on 08/23/2002 9:54:50 PM PDT by Euro-American Scum
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To: Ford Fairlane
> I have NEVER seen one jam

I have an original 9MM model 17, it jammed once about halfway through the first magazine I ran through it, but since then it has worked just fine. Probably limp-wrist, like some have said here.

The trigger safety? Well, it is different, but in operation it just doesn't bother me. It's a decent and (at least mine was from the kitchen table FFL next door) inexpensive little gun.

Dave in Eugene

42 posted on 08/23/2002 11:21:34 PM PDT by Clinging Bitterly
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To: steamroller
I don't see the great advantage to the Glock "safe action trigger"-it is no improvement over single action.

The Glock's action is AFAIK completely unique. Indeed, I would like to see the terms "Single Action (SA)" and "Double Action (DA)" replaced with four terms, defined as follows:

Single Action
Nearly all of the energy for the hammer is imparted during cocking; pulling the trigger does not add any appreciable energy to the hammer.
Double Action
All of the energy for the hammer is imparted by pulling the trigger. On any gun I'd call double-action (see below), repeated trigger pulls produce repeated hammer strikes.
Intermediate Action
Some of the energy for the hammer is imparted by cocking, but some is added by the trigger. IAO pistols tend to have shorter trigger pulls than DAO's, but they cannot repeat-strike a primer in case of a misfire.
Glock Action
Much of the energy for the first shot comes from the first trigger pull. Unlike most DAO or IAO pistols which decock or half-decock themselves after each shot, however, the Glock remains fully cocked as the action is cycled. Fully releasing the trigger will cause the Glock to be half-decocked. Releasing it only slightly, however, will reset the sear mechanism while leaving the hammer cocked, allowing for what is almost a single-action trigger pull for the follow-on shots.
Comparing Glock Action to DAO, SA/DA, and SAO pistols... The Glock's 'trigger safety' has only three rules for observation; even a novice should be able to master them: What's so "advanced" about that?
43 posted on 08/24/2002 3:40:59 AM PDT by supercat
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To: The Magical Mischief Tour
It was recently stated on another BBS that the Glock Safety was akin to placing the gas pedal on top of the brake…

If one reversed the functionality of the brake pedal (so the breaks would be engaged except when pressure was applied) that might be sorta right. But IMHO the Glock's safety is the easiest one to use properly. Just three rules:

  1. If you pull the trigger, it goes bang.
  2. If you don't pull the trigger, it doesn't go bang.
  3. If you don't want it to go bang, don't pull the trigger.
      What's so hard about those?

44 posted on 08/24/2002 3:47:43 AM PDT by supercat
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To: archy
I've had my glock jam up like their talking about exactly once: two weeks ago

I was using Wolf ammo. Upon firing, the case split, wedging itself firmly into the barrel, which required disassembly of the gun to get the @#%$^ thing out. My local gunsmith told me it's the third problem he's seen with Wolf ammo doing bad things in glocks (one of the other two, it blew up the glock).

Solution: don't use Wolf ammo any more (it's Russian-made using laminated steel case instead of brass). I got it as cheap practice ammo, but it's not worth the risk

45 posted on 08/24/2002 3:52:54 AM PDT by SauronOfMordor
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To: Euro-American Scum; Squantos
Thought you might find this of interest.

one in 450,000.

let's see here... i shoot idpa... tell me that a 1911 won't jam in 450 shots... just nine boxes...

BWAHAHAHAHAHA... AHHH HAHAHAHA HA.


oh gosh. please stop, you're killing me here.

46 posted on 08/24/2002 4:22:26 AM PDT by glock rocks
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To: toddst
Look up the terms "opinion " and "fact" in the dictionary and then repost a response.

Glocks are not cheap. - FACT

Glocks are VERY reliable. - FACT

Allow me to give you an example. The sun is hot is a fact. The sun is pretty in an opinion.


Stay safe; stay armed.


47 posted on 08/24/2002 6:11:02 AM PDT by Eaker
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To: The Magical Mischief Tour
It was recently stated on another BBS that the Glock Safety was akin to placing the gas pedal on top of the brake…

My Glock only fires when I pull the trigger. My Glock ALWAYS fires when I pull the trigger.

I am beyond the point of needing a "beginner" gun.


Stay safe; stay armed.


48 posted on 08/24/2002 6:13:37 AM PDT by Eaker
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To: Eaker
BUMP !!
49 posted on 08/24/2002 6:40:48 AM PDT by glock rocks
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To: SauronOfMordor
I was using Wolf ammo. Upon firing, the case split, wedging itself firmly into the barrel, which required disassembly of the gun to get the @#%$^ thing out. My local gunsmith told me it's the third problem he's seen with Wolf ammo doing bad things in glocks (one of the other two, it blew up the glock).

Solution: don't use Wolf ammo any more (it's Russian-made using laminated steel case instead of brass). I got it as cheap practice ammo, but it's not worth the risk

I've seen similar problems with the mini-Glocks using aluminum-cased *Blazer* ammo from CCI, cheap for inexpensive practice and a neat technological step forward, but far from perfected, it seems. I have had six Glocks since they were introduced, and am now down to two; they've been very reliable and servicable for me, and I have no complaints, but I've gone back to the original full-size Glock 17 9mm and a mini-Glock 30 in .45 for concealment use.

I'd be very interested in knowing what tmodel of Glock you observed your difficulties with, and any more details you might share about your pal's Glock blowup, being known more and more commonly by the less precise term *Glock kaBOOM.* But it's also worth noting that military-issue M1911A1 had difficulties with WWII issue steel-cased ammo too, often found with the headstamp *EC43* from the E/vansville C/hrysler plant where it was produced by the millions. Various stoppages and extractor breakage have been reported, as has ejector battering and ejector pin shearings, though the ammo reportedly functions fine in .45 Thompson and M3/M3A1 submachineguns, in which its use was really intended.

But my dad carried it in his Air Corps-issue .45 with which he guarded Norden Bombsights and classified target analysis documents, and my paternal grandada carried the stuff in the Reising submachinegun with which he guarded a critical railway bridge when there were well-deserved concerns about enemy saboteurs landed by submarine. So the stuff was around then, and sometimes still shows up as closeouts of leftover wartime stocks, nearly 60 years after the fact.

The lesson is clear: a good handgun deserves good ammo. And Glocks are also known to be very intolerant of imprecicely reloaded fodder, so stick with high quality factory ammunition.

-archy-/-

50 posted on 08/24/2002 7:43:54 AM PDT by archy
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To: J Jay
"Our studies have shown this to be a rare occurrence," said police spokesman Chief Michael Collins. "In the worst-case scenario...we estimated that this has happened only once in 450,000 times when fired."

If this is true, the New York Police Department may have the world's most reliable pistol.

Indeed. And I wish it were true. Surely they wouldn't LIE about such a life-and-death issue, so maybe he's just less than fully knowledgable, per previous FREEPpost *here*:

As this malfunction became more of an issue, the Department naturally approached Glock, Inc. and requested assistance. At the onset, Glock refused to acknowledge the problem and only reluctantly agreed to replace one-for-one the guns that displayed the problem. NYPD felt that this did not address the issue properly. I personally know one officer, one of the most senior members assigned to the Emergency Services Unit, who had two different Model 19 pistols Phase Three on him three times on two consecutive days. This MOS is a great shooter and knows how to operate in a hostile environment. He gave up and purchased an S&W Model 5946 from the approved list. While NYPD itself was attempting to downplay the issue with MOS by asserting that the Phase Three malfunction had only occurred at the department range during practice and qualification sessions, they were, unfortunately, being less than truthful. As a Sergeant in a confidential investigative unit in mid-1997 I personally delivered to the range a Model 19 that had locked up tight after a Detective got off one round in a street confrontation. Fortunately the perps fled after that first shot and my guy was uninjured. In 1998 as a Lieutenant I worked with a police officer whose Model 19 did the same thing in a running gunfight. Fortunately for him he was with other MOS whose guns did not malfunction, and the bad guy was turned into a colander.


51 posted on 08/24/2002 8:09:19 AM PDT by archy
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To: Copernicus
And don't they also shoot a special load for NYPD? Its factory ammo but a lower velocity than sold over the counter to everyone else I think.

They used to, and that may have been part of their problem, lessened sinch their change to a higher-intensity loading. Obviously, in heavily-populated New York, overpenetration wiould be of considerable concern, and there are two ways to address that: with a lower-powered load that doesn't penetrate as much, or with a hotter, lighter hollowpoint bullet that expands in the intended target [IF it's hit...big *if* there!] and has its penetrating ability reduced thereby.

But see following, from the material posted iat the link in the previous post:

When this issue first arose circa 1996 the NYPD was utilizing a standard pressure 115 grain FMJ round produced specifically for the department by Winchester. It was designated a non-standard load by Winchester, and identified as the "Q4146" round. Since this was not a very hot load it was postulated that the ammo was the cause of this malfunction. Unfortunately, when the NYPD transitioned in 1999 to a "hot" 124 grain +P Speer GDHP that was specifically "souped up" to around 1225 FPS, the occurrences of Phase Three's diminished, but did not altogether disappear. It should be noted that during this time frame none of the other department-approved 9mm semi-automatic pistols in use experienced a single Phase Three malfunction.

As this malfunction became more of an issue, the Department naturally approached Glock, Inc. and requested assistance. At the onset, Glock refused to acknowledge the problem and only reluctantly agreed to replace one-for-one the guns that displayed the problem.


52 posted on 08/24/2002 8:17:01 AM PDT by archy
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To: Eaker
The issue is confidence in the duty weapon carried.

While the Glock 19 has been purchased in higher numbers (25,000 units) than either the S&W 5946 or Sig-Sauer P226 DAO variant, approximately two-thirds of NYPD's last academy class chose a handgun other than the Glocks as their duty weapon.

This is FACT.

53 posted on 08/24/2002 8:26:18 AM PDT by toddst
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To: Eaker
I am beyond the point of needing a "beginner" gun.

Roger that! A beginner asked me the other day about buying a Glock as a first weapon. Even though I admire Glocks (I have three, with thousands of rounds and no FTFs yet), I advised against it until he has more experience. I suggested a Beretta (safety/decocker) or a Ruger (DA/decocker) instead.

I suggested he consider a Glock when he instinctively knows the best primary pistol safety is the gray organ between the ears.

54 posted on 08/24/2002 8:31:53 AM PDT by Jonah Hex
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To: archy
I'd be very interested in knowing what tmodel of Glock you observed your difficulties with, and any more details you might share about your pal's Glock blowup, being known more and more commonly by the less precise term *Glock kaBOOM.*

Mine is a glock 30 in .45 cal

The glock that blew up was a glock 19. Don't know further details, was told this by the gun-store owner who I had help me get the case out of the gun. In all three events, the cause was a case rupture. The case that caused my problem had a crack from the case mouth down 2/3rds of the case. I think I'm fortunate that it didn't crack all the way down, spewing hot gas into my almost-full mag

55 posted on 08/24/2002 8:39:59 AM PDT by SauronOfMordor
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To: Ford Fairlane
I personally carry a HK USP as primary weapon, a Sig 239 as backup #1 (both with Hirtenberger FL +P+ Police ammo), a Walther PP Super 9x18 as backup #2 and a 7.65 PP as backup #3.

Of these the only one that jams is the PP, if you feed it cheap hollowpoints.

Before 1994 the primary weapon was a Walther P1, backup #1 was a P4 - I switched because the P38 line doesn't like to feed all hollowpoints (but they do like the FL ammo - it was designed for it) and you don't always know what ammo you will be able to get.

Try the Federal 9BP 115-grain load [#16 in the display below] or the Remington 115-grain RNJHP [#4 below] for use in a P.38 or aluminum-framed P.1, long a favourite of mine, though usually taking a backseat to the Browning GP I've carried and used since 1969. You'll likely find that it's not the hollowpoint configuration itself, but the overall length of the loaded round, that's critical in feeding in a P.38 or PP, and a PPK is even fussier, possibly because of the greater magazine spring pressure from its 1-round-shorter magazine.

I had a little PP in 7,65 that was one of the most accurate of it's breed I've ever had, and let it go to a fellow newspaperman facing death threats, who practiced and practiced with it and became extremely good with it, the only firearm he owned at the time. At least it went to good hands, but I've often wondered if it had been tuned, and if so, by whom and using what methods. I replaced it for my own purposes with another plain-jane Makarov, whose safety at least works the way I prefer.

Various 9mm projectiles performance compared in ballistic gelatin here:

*source*

*source*

56 posted on 08/24/2002 8:48:56 AM PDT by archy
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To: toddst; Eaker
This is the first time they've offered the Sig in a while. What people don't understand is how much of an effect one firearm training officer can have on a rookie's selection. One comment like "well, the Glocks are much easier to take care of" can sway a whole bunch of relatively inexperienced shooters towards the Glock. So I'm not sure which gun is carried really make much of difference since you usually make the decision at a time when you are the most ignorant about firearms. I doubt most guys looked into the decision as much as I did. There should be a thread here somewhere that I started about it.

For the record in my group we split about evenly between the three, and I would imagine thats how its gone for the other companies as well. I've put about 500 rounds through my Sig so far and I'm quite happy. I shot two 98s and a 96 in my pre-qualifiers and I haven't looked back. No phase 3's from the Glocks that I've seen. To be honest I heard the phase 3 rumors around the department and on the web before selection and all the secrecy coming from Glock made a difference to me. Either tell me it isn't true or admit it and fix the problem.

57 posted on 08/24/2002 8:50:49 AM PDT by newwahoo
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To: SauronOfMordor
Mine is a glock 30 in .45 cal

The glock that blew up was a glock 19. Don't know further details, was told this by the gun-store owner who I had help me get the case out of the gun. In all three events, the cause was a case rupture. The case that caused my problem had a crack from the case mouth down 2/3rds of the case. I think I'm fortunate that it didn't crack all the way down, spewing hot gas into my almost-full mag

I shoot a G30 in .45 as well, one of the two Glocks I now own. I've tried a G36, but it doesn't fit my hand as well without the Pierce magazine/grip extension, which I also have on my G30. My reloads are Glock 21 magazines left over from one of my previous Glocks, now happily at work for a local Sheriff's deputy.

Note too that some of the old steel-cased ammo also used a mild steel jacketed bullet, and some examples have been founded rusted solidly together, little grenades just waiting to be fired after all these years. Best left to the collectors....

Hope your Glock continues to work for you as well as mine have for me. But I tend to err on the side of conservative caution and doublecheck reports with my own experiments. I think I'll see if I can get my Glock 17 to exhibit a *phase 3* malfunction. Whether it does or not, it should be fun expending a few thousand rounds to find out, and the Glock 18 33-round magazines are a hoot to run through.

-archy-/-

58 posted on 08/24/2002 8:57:54 AM PDT by archy
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To: toddst
Would you want to trust your life to the lowest bidder?

If its a Glock, yes. Not to take away from the multitude of other fine weapons, but I have 2 Glocks and trust my life to both.

59 posted on 08/24/2002 9:02:39 AM PDT by meyer
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To: toddst
I have 4 Glocks.. They have all been insanely reliable.

A Glock is a trooper, it will last forever and keep going, even when filthy.

You can't say that about a Beretta or Sig really, they require much more work.
60 posted on 08/24/2002 9:06:09 AM PDT by Monty22
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