3 CZ75s and a 2075 Rami. Not weird.
2 Beretta 92s. Not weird.
(6) 1911's (way down from normal) and 5 AR's......whats wierd.................
I wouldn't buy two 1911's. If I did I would just end up paying two thousand dollars for identical guns that don't cycle hollow points and have wobbly triggers! That's bad investing.
It seems weird to me not to want another one if you really like it.
Maybe it's our age that is guiding this philosophy. Many of us grew up in the '50s, '60s and '70s without the abundance we have today. If you lost something or if it broke, you learned to live without it since running to the store and grabbing another one was generally not an option. I know that over the years, when I find something I like, I buy a second one eventually. This extends to cars as well. I have, and love, my '69 Fiat Spider. It only makes sense to buy a '68 and keep it as a spare since if anything happened to the '69, I would not be able to just run out and get another.
Folks born in the last 30 years have lived in a world where there is so much abundance of everything, we throw perfectly good stuff away to make room for marginally better stuff. In today's world, maybe having a second one of the same thing you already have is weird. That means you will have to get rid of two when your fancy takes you in a different direction.
My favorite pistol by far is my glock 17. I love this gun so much i think I wanna buy another one. So is it weird to have two of the same guns? Usually I am always buying something different. Different calibers, different designs, but in my opinion there is no better pistol than a glock 17. At the end of the day though how different could another glock 17 be from any other one. Anyone out there have multiple glocks in the same caliber? Maybe you could help me with this strange notion.
Double Fisted!