- great in reliability in factory (or nearly) form. I want a Tikka pistol. Shoot it dirty for it's life and it still works
Despite people saying that Glocks are the Tikka’s of pistols- they are not. Not even close. Tikkas are extremely reliable, AND extremely high performing. Glocks are reliable, and mediocre performing. They can be used and shot to a very high level, but it takes significantly more skill and work to do so compared to other pistols.
Glocks are the Ruger M77’s of the pistol world. There is no Tikka equivalent in pistols when factoring in price- the closest would be a CZ Shadow 2.
What I write below is based upon actual shooting performance with scored targets and timers, under stress, and with relatively large amounts of people.
- prefer to have manual safety
This is a good thought. But also eliminates Glock.
That said, I've been looking into Glocks, Sig, and staccato.
- g19, g45, g48 - maybe g43 or 43x but they seem too small
The single stack Glocks are harder to shoot well- significantly so. The G45 is an excellent pistol of the type. But no manual thumb safety and does demand more of the shooter to equal the same performance.
- p320 m18, p320 x compact, p320 x carry, p365xl
Despite media and hysteria, the M18 with thumb safety is a good pistol. 100% you will want to swap the grip module for the Brouwer M1811 module. The P365 with thumb safety is a very pistol as well. Even though it is smaller, it is quite shootable.
Very good guns. They are definitely the highest performing pistols on your list, by quite a margin. Reliability wise they are solid.
First question... Would I actually see any of the benefit of the staccato unless I became an extremely good shooter?
Yes, but maybe not noticed if you are just shooting cans in the backyard. You could say it like such- if you knew without a doubt you were going to be in a shooting, and you had any base skills at all- you would absolutely choose the Staccato’s.
Because the g45 and g48 seem to be variants of the g19, are they just as reliable?
The G45 yes. Functionally the G48 as well , but there have been more issues there.
Does a slimmer grip generally hurt or hinder shootability (g48 vs g45)? I realize it's probably just a personal thing
Yes. Regardless of hand size (within reason).
Is there much difference in reliability between the Glocks and the p320/p365? Much difference in reliability between the different p320 models?
This is a bit harder to address. The Gen 5 9mm Glocks are probably the “most reliable” pistols made. But that I mean- most mean rounds between stoppages (MRBS). However, functionally- there isn’t a real difference. It doesn’t really matter if it is 10,000 MRBS or 25,000 MRBS- both are beyond reliable enough.
Having not carried a pistol before... For backpack hunters where weight/space is a concern, would a subcompact be better or are the sizes of those above small enough to not be an issue? (Again, probably personal preference)
Yes.
Also, yes there is a range with rentals nearby and I'll do that before purchasing
That isn’t going to do much for you. You stated you aren’t a pistol shooter, don’t really have skill, and aren’t knowledgeable about them. How a pistol “feels” has almost zero bearing on how well it can or will be shot, and any relevance it does have is almost always to the negative- feelings lie and “good feeling pistols” often perform worse in actual measured shooting.
Based on your stated goals/use, I would be narrowing it down to either-
The P365 with thumb safety if weight is a primary driver
Or
The Staccato C or CS if max shooting performance is the main driver.
Or…. Keltec PMR 30.