When you index your trigger finger along the side of the pistol, do you lay it high up on the slide? I sure don’t.
Looking at a glock 19 serpa right now. The button is over the frame above the trigger guard. If one pulls the pistol straight out after pressing the button, the trigger finger lays along the side of the frame, exactly where it is supposed to.
From an engineering standpoint, the design of the Serpa is fine. It is from a Kinesiology standpoint that the shortfalls apparently manifest.
February 23rd, 2016 at 7:42 pm
It would seem that, flexing ones finger would cause ones finger to flex. And now there is supporting evidence.
February 23rd, 2016 at 11:32 pm
Now if that gun had a light trigger pull, like a Kahr, or 1911 with the safety off, yep it will go bang.
Evan a 5 lb Glock trigger might go off.
February 24th, 2016 at 10:58 am
It would seem that if they could redesign the Serpa to relocate the button up along the slide–they would have a winner.
February 28th, 2016 at 7:15 pm
@HL
When you index your trigger finger along the side of the pistol, do you lay it high up on the slide? I sure don’t.
Looking at a glock 19 serpa right now. The button is over the frame above the trigger guard. If one pulls the pistol straight out after pressing the button, the trigger finger lays along the side of the frame, exactly where it is supposed to.
From an engineering standpoint, the design of the Serpa is fine. It is from a Kinesiology standpoint that the shortfalls apparently manifest.