This is my size of iwb conceal carry. However, I'd use the 17rd magazine for that since it's flush fitting. 21rd magazines for range or going to Cincinnati.I feel guns have reached the point where phones were a few years ago. They went as small as possible and are now working their way back to being the size of a brick. How much bigger can they make a "sub compact" pistol before it's just a full sized pistol again? I think my 365 XL is about as big as I want a small pistol.
I was thinking of a reply and you said it for me.I feel guns have reached the point where phones were a few years ago. They went as small as possible and are now working their way back to being the size of a brick. How much bigger can they make a "sub compact" pistol before it's just a full sized pistol again? I think my 365 XL is about as big as I want a small pistol.
It ends when the individual figures out its all just to sell firearms.Meh!!!! Not much excites me these days. People complained about guns like the Hkock 43 only having 6 rounds so they run extensions. Glock have them a 43X they complain and need shield 15 round mags.
Where does it end you want capacity get a Glock 19 size you want thin and compact 43 or 43X size not sure what the expectation is.
Guns are suppose to be comforting not comfortable….Clint Smith
I don't disagree with the premise...it's definitely becoming more bloated. But Sig isn't marketing this variant as a subcompact, they're calling it a full-size. It's basically a slimline alternative to a P320 at this point, that retains the capacity of the larger gun.I feel guns have reached the point where phones were a few years ago. They went as small as possible and are now working their way back to being the size of a brick. How much bigger can they make a "sub compact" pistol before it's just a full sized pistol again? I think my 365 XL is about as big as I want a small pistol.
And it's modular so there are tons of options and one isn't forced to buy a complete new gun to change variations within some reason. I get that building a gun completely from parts is more expensive, but buying a new module and some mags can give one a whole new scope of what their existing gun can do.I don't disagree with the premise...it's definitely becoming more bloated. But Sig isn't marketing this variant as a subcompact, they're calling it a full-size. It's basically a slimline alternative to a P320 at this point, that retains the capacity of the larger gun.
The 365 is interesting because it was originally designed as a micro-compact that has grown into a full-size, whereas traditionally designs have started out as a full-size gun which gets shrunk for subsequent variants.
I have the X TACOPS. I’ve carry it on Sundays to church. IWB and it’s a great pistol. I don’t want one with a longer slide/barrel IWB.This is my size of iwb conceal carry. However, I'd use the 17rd magazine for that since it's flush fitting. 21rd magazines for range or going to Cincinnati.
I carry full size 1911s, CZ P10F etc. This would actually be smaller/lighter for me.I have the X TACOPS. I’ve carry it on Sundays to church. IWB and it’s a great pistol. I don’t want one with a longer slide/barrel IWB.
Yeah, but they're still making and selling that original variant, so at least there's that. Sig has an annoying habit of discontinuing the basic stuff and only selling the expensive upmarket versions, but they've not done that with the 365. At least not yet.Sometimes a picture is worth a thousand words. This picture is worth one word: ugly. A few years ago the P365 was the darling of the concealed carry crowd. Now look at it.
Can't one who owns a P365 say the first one out. Can't they just drop the action into this frame, and get a slide to fit the frame?Yeah, but they're still making and selling that original variant, so at least there's that. Sig has an annoying habit of discontinuing the basic stuff and only selling the expensive upmarket versions, but they've not done that with the 365. At least not yet.
Theoretically, yes. But knowing Sig it probably costs more to buy the parts than to just go buy the whole gun.Can't one who owns a P365 say the first one out. Can't they just drop the action into this frame, and get a slide to fit the frame?
So not really like AR-15's as someone put it.Theoretically, yes. But knowing Sig it probably costs more to buy the parts than to just go buy the whole gun.
There's also the chance that one of the numerous unpublicized updates to the base design between the very first P365 release and now could cause you some issues that have to be worked around. When I took the P365 armorer class, the instructor (who was a Sig NH employee, not an adjunct) had to call back to the office for instructions on how to get the striker assembly out of the slide because they'd changed the design between the gun he'd trained on and the ones they sent out for the class.
I had a guy with an original P365 and a Macro one time who tried to swap slides during a range session, and couldn't get the macro slide to cycle on his other gun (or vice versa...I don't remember exactly now). I didn't get a chance to dig into it, so I'm not sure what the actual problem was...could have been something simple like interference with the grip module, or even something he was doing wrong...but it wasn't simply plug-and-play between the two guns.