I finished my match yesterday on a typical Texas Hot, Humid Summer day. I was bushed. I recently closed a deal on used Stealth with a forum member, so it I pushed myself for test drive. I was skeptical that in my tired condition that I would be able to run a box of 147 gr Golden Sabres and a box of 147 Hydra Shoks through this gun without a hitch, I was mentally and physically spent.
Of course, No Problem!
Something just does not add up here.
Why is it that This overweight, out of shape man in his latter 50's with nerve damage from the tips of his fingers all the way to the shoulders in both extremeties, with addition to major tendonitis WITH Damage in the strong arm and minor tendonitis in the weak arm, along with other physical ailments; is able to reliably shoot his FOUR R9's WITHOUT Failures to Feed or Eject, and feed Any ammo loaded? (yes, I know, I still have to work on more ammo selection for the Stealth)
If anyone should be having gun issues, I should be the poster child.
So why do guys keep writing in with problems? It is all possibly too simple.
Now, please, please don't anyone take this next comment as snooty or upity, and hear me out.
About a week ago another forum member said to me " the R9 is for Very Experienced Shooters".
I knew that, but never "heard" that. It hit me really hard. Now I'm NOT saying that every problem is due to guys that don't know how to shoot their guns. But maybe a good proportion are. We do spend time teaching guys how to shoot these things don't we?
I'm just saying that if a guy is New to an Auto,Small Auto, any Pistol or obviously shooting; the Best may not be the best thing to start with. As Richard has said - "these are Ferraris", would you give a 15-16 yr a Ferrari for their first car?
I think that in this case, it may be better for these guys to start out with a more forgiving gun such as Kahr, Smith, Ruger, or Keltec, just to name a few. After practicing for a year or a 1000 rounds or so, Then maybe move up to the Best.
Guys, I think that our love and passion for this great gun has made us good salesman, but at the same time we have done a disservice to some "newer" shooters as seen by evidence of sales in the classifieds.
(I think the R380 may have been more of a wise move than we thought and some of us should not have that "John Wayne syndrome", myself included)
Afterall, the bigger picture is Shooting, and then the R9 will fall into place.
Any thoughts?