Pond James Pond
New member
I recently joined and I have already had a spate of excellent answers from members to my question about FEG and FN, Hi Power-derived pistols.
In that thread, I was considering the possibility of buying one of the two above pistols. They are second hand.
During the course of that thread, I found that for €55 and €95 more I could buy a NEW CZ 110 or CZ P-07 Duty, respectively.
That is the price difference between a 15 year old gun and a new one (although most handguns in this country are way more expensive).
This got me thinking.
The FEG and FN I handled in the shop felt comfy and solid. Used, but solid. Dependable, would be the word. Most posts on my thread seemed to support that impression.
Then I look at the new gen of nice new, shiny pistols, especially the polymer frames and I think: what will they be like in 15 years. This is purely based on my impression, not experience, but they don't look as robust.
The same can be said of cars for example. Nowadays, you buy and expect 5 years service out of it. Then you trade it in with less than 80,000 miles before anything falls off.
It seems before stuff was expected to last a lot longer, and be fixed: not binned and replaced.
So:
Do you think modern handguns are built to last, or are they also more of the use and discard technology we're getting?
Particularly pistols: Ruger revolvers look like they could lead a double life as a lump hammer and still be no worse for it...
Disclaimer: I was born weeeeell into the second half of the 20th century, so this is not a grumpy old bloke bemoaning the modern age!
In that thread, I was considering the possibility of buying one of the two above pistols. They are second hand.
During the course of that thread, I found that for €55 and €95 more I could buy a NEW CZ 110 or CZ P-07 Duty, respectively.
That is the price difference between a 15 year old gun and a new one (although most handguns in this country are way more expensive).
This got me thinking.
The FEG and FN I handled in the shop felt comfy and solid. Used, but solid. Dependable, would be the word. Most posts on my thread seemed to support that impression.
Then I look at the new gen of nice new, shiny pistols, especially the polymer frames and I think: what will they be like in 15 years. This is purely based on my impression, not experience, but they don't look as robust.
The same can be said of cars for example. Nowadays, you buy and expect 5 years service out of it. Then you trade it in with less than 80,000 miles before anything falls off.
It seems before stuff was expected to last a lot longer, and be fixed: not binned and replaced.
So:
Do you think modern handguns are built to last, or are they also more of the use and discard technology we're getting?
Particularly pistols: Ruger revolvers look like they could lead a double life as a lump hammer and still be no worse for it...
Disclaimer: I was born weeeeell into the second half of the 20th century, so this is not a grumpy old bloke bemoaning the modern age!