I didn't "know" anything about Glock before I bought this. I had heard all the hype about how it was "the" gun to have when it comes to reliability, that "all the police departments" were using them, etc., etc. etc. The 26 was well suited to carrying concealed, it was 9mm (enough to stop or slow down an attacker), and it was affordable.
It isn't the easiest thing to hang on to, but I was okay with that. You've always got to make compromises (size vs feeling good in one's hand). It seemed accurate enough, too, at first. And, it was considerably easier to field strip than the Ruger I had at the time (even moreso than my Kimber that I bought later). About my third time out to the range to shoot it, I noticed it was off to one side by several inches at 7 yds. After a little investigating, I found out the front sight was twisted to one side (which I later attributed to "yanking" it out of a kydex-type holster that was snug). With little else in the way of options, and not knowing for sure how it was attached to the slide (pressed, glued, threaded?), I decided to get hold of it with a pair of pliers (padded a with a layer of cloth) and see if I could straighten it out. About two seconds later is when I realized the sight was made of plastic. It was mushed into an odd shape that was never going to be acceptable to me (I like things perfect, or as perfect as I can get them).
So, I called Glock about a replacement. I had already been looking at some tritium sights, so I inquired about those, too. I was very impressed with the customer service. They answered the phone after one ring with a real person, transferred me to a techincian once they were aware of my needs. The tech was very knowledgeable and very polite and helpful. He was even willing to refer me to some third party manufacturers of tritium sights if my main concern was cost. In the end, I sent them my slide, they replaced the original sights with tritium, and sent it back in about a week?s time for a very reasonable price (around $70 if I remember right). It was dead on again when I took it to the range, and though I haven?t actually shot it in the dark yet, I would think it would work rather well (if I was actually at a distance that required using the sights).
I have, however, had a few feeding problems (FTF jams). Most were when I was using a high capacity magazine (like the 33 rnd mag I just had to have). The only jam I recall when using a standard mag was after my wrist surgery when I was gripping the gun differently and got pinched when my left thumb got in the way of the slide.
Just wondering what others? experiences with this gun have been.