Originally posted by Halo
The XD has never locked open when I'm firing it. Only when I'm doing home drill with an UNLOADED magazine.
Yet the manual does say if there is a feeding problem, the slide can be pulled back and locked.
This is the same for all pistols, isn't it?
The slide should ONLY lock open if you shoot the magazine dry. Or pull the slide back over an already empty magazine. Unless there's some sort of bizarre feature on that weapon. If the slide is SUPPOSED to lock if you pull it all the way back, with a full or semi full magazine in the weapon, then that's another reason I'm glad I DID NOT buy one of those things. If you are trying to drill with an empty magazine, and you pull the slide all the way back and it locks back, it is supposed to. You CANNOT drill for "making ready" with an empty magazine. It CANNOT be done. You are teaching yourself VERY bad habits at best, and practicing to get yourself (or someone you love) hurt or killed.
Part of owning a self shucker is learning the manual of arms, the right way. That means practicing loading, unloading, and ALL functions with loaded magazines in a safe place and in a safe manner. There is NO other way to learn to handle that weapon safely and properly. NONE.
The slide on my P-14 ONLY locks back when the magazine is dry (UNLESS I force the slide release lever up manually), because the magazine follower pushes the slide release lever up and locks the slide so you know the weapon is empty, and so you can shove another magazine in, press the slide release, and you again have a loaded, cocked weapon.
I keep my P-14 loaded, with the hammer down on a live round. If I need it, I pull it from it's holster, and pull the hammer back if I need to. My weapon is action ready as soon as I lay my hand on it. Because if I need a weapon, I need it NOW, and NOT after I load it and fumble with it for 15 seconds. I did look at the XD, and several others. I'll keep my 1911 based P-14, thanks, John Moses Browning was a true genius, and the 1911 is a marvel of simplicity, function, efficiency, and ergonomics.