Tag Archives: glock 43

Around the block with the Glock 43

In 2014, when Glock announced the .380 ACP G42, a wave of disappointment swept over the country as– except for nerds who really wanted a banned-from import/LE-only G25– it seemed everyone wanted a micro-compact 9mm pistol instead.

Glock 42 with Streamlight TLR6 combination light. The total weight package with the gun, light, batteries and 7 rounds of 380 is 24 ounces. Pretty heady stuff for 2014. 

The next year at the NRA Annual Meetings in Nashville, Glock made good and delivered the G43. I was there at the launch event and can vouch that the excitement was electric.

Having jumped on the G42 train early (don’t look at me that way), by the time the G43 came out I was already gun shy, no pun intended, and soon after Glock delivered the 10+1 capacity G43X (followed by the optics ready G43X MOS) to the market. This led to deals on lots of traded-in single stack G43s as folks went with the gently larger G43X and soon started buying extendo magazines/base pads to up the capacity even further.

Well, back in 2019, I finally took the G43 jump (not the G43X as I was intrigued by the short size of the original model) and picked up a Vickers Tactical edition which was a limited run that came complete with a Wilson Combat rear sight and AmeriGlo ProGlo tritium front, a Tango Down slide lock, enhanced magazine release, and Vickers +2 magazine extension.

Since then, I’ve found it has a lot of good things to recommend it, and few bad.

When coupled with a premium personal defense load such as Speer’s 124-grain 9mm Gold Dot Short Barrel JHP– which is designed to work in barrels as short as 1.9 inches while producing less felt recoil and achieving reliable expansion and penetration– you have a nice little carry set up. For reference, my G43, with 10 rounds of Speer loaded and the +3 Taran baseplate installed, weighs just 24 ounces and fits in the same places as my J-frame S&W while having twice the capacity. Don’t forget, you can always carry a flush-fit standard or +1 base pad in the pistol and a +3 as a backup.

More of what I have learned in carrying the G43 over the past few years in my column at Guns.com.

Did you jump on the Glock 42 or 43 bandwagon but want a light?

If you waited all this time for one of the slim line Glock .380 and 9mm single-stacks to hit the market, but miss the tactical weapons light you had on your other platforms, Pennsylvania-based Streamlight has you covered.

Introduced this week is the TLR-6, what the company is calling an “ultra-compact” lightweight combination illuminator light and red aiming laser– the first of its kind meant for a sub-compact pistol as thin as the Glock 42/43.

Designed to fit on the trigger guard of either the 42 or 43, the light is crafted from durable, impact-resistant engineering polymer. As Glock spent years trimming the weight of these guns down, the TLR-6 does its best not to spoil that, tipping the scales at just 1.27 ounces including the weight of its two 3 Volt CR-1/3N lithium coin batteries (included). For reference, that’s about the weight of $1.25 worth of U.S. quarters.

Glock 42 with Streamlight TLR=6 combination light. Total weight package with the gun, light, batteries, and 7 rounds of 9mm is 24 ounces. Click to big up

Glock 42 with Streamlight TLR=6 combination light. Total weight package with the gun, light, batteries, and 7 rounds of .380 is just 18.5-ounces. Click to big up

More on it in my column over at Glock Forum

 

Back from NRA

Sorry was falling down on the number of posts since last week. Just got back in from covering the 144th Annual NRA Meeting and Exhibits in Nashville with Guns.com. Nine acres of guns, 70,000 attendees, 11-ish GOP Presidential candidates, one protest. Two personal highlights:

Got to jam out on the new Glock 43. No malfunctions, seems to work well.

Got to jam out on the new Glock 43. No malfunctions, seems to work well.

And picked up the J. Guthrie Award from the American Suppressor Association for my pieces on NFA items. it weighs like 12-pounds...

And picked up the J. Guthrie Award from the American Suppressor Association for my pieces on NFA items. it weighs like 12-pounds…

35 Years of 9mm Glocky transformation

The good folks over in Smyrna, Georgia have finally caught up to the pack that has been led by Ruger, Kahr, S&W, and Springfield Armory to produce a concealed carry piece that everyone has been wanting– the Glock 43.

pistole80
(This is how your standard Glock 9mm started off about 35 years ago– they’ve come a long way)

Back in the early 1980s, Gaston Glock introduced his revolutionary Pistole 80 for the review on a contract for new handguns for the Austrian Army. Beating out longtime supplier Steyr, Glock’s new gun was a polymer framed 9mm striker fired pistol with a double stack mag that held an impressive 17 rounds. After the Austrian military said, “Ja” on the new gun, Glock started to export these gems to the U.S. as the Glock 17– and the rest in history.

But you see in the past decade or so, while Glock was making millions of excellent duty guns, the other makers crept in and catered to those who wanted a decent concealed carry gun that was the holy grail of being slim and compact enough to where it was almost unnoticeable in every day carry while wearing normal clothes– while still having a large enough round to give a lot of confidence in.

Well this week, it looks like Glock decided to deliver an answer to those competitors.

Things change...

Things change…

The rest in my column at Firearms Talk

Early (and often) confirmation that Glock 43 is not a rumor

As we covered last week, there have been mounting buzz that Glock was set to intro a new subcompact handgun, specifically a 9mm single stack that some were dubbing the G43. Well it looks like it is not a rumor.

And once the first legit gun mag said it was out there, by noon all the rest jumped on the dogpile…

Read the rest in my column at Glock Forum