New Staccato C just discontinued.

I emailed them to ask about the release date and SKU number(s).

Looking forward to hearing what they have to say - that's a pretty big deal for them to be doing these mags, when the only gun using it had about a 2-year run.

For anyone who has a Staccato C: as a general rule with discontinued guns, expect aftermarket options to decrease steadily and possibly quickly. Get everything you might expect to need for it without waiting.

Aftermarket support will just fade away, especially with things extremely specific to the C - triggers especially will probably be vaporware in 10 years. Holster options are already limited. Fewer companies will provide fewer options for optics plates. And a supply-chain shock can make mags absolutely unobtainable for long stretches. I've seen all of this before with different guns that, when I bought them, everything was flush in the aftermarket space. Now I can't find anything for them.
 
Hey, congrats on getting the C. I just keep on getting more impressed with mine.

[snip]

EDIT: All the the mags load tight - the tightest I can recall having ever used, for any gun. Last round requires a lot of force with your thumb, and when you're shooting in volume that gets old. Do yourself a favor and pick up one of these. They work far better than I expected, and far faster than loading mags manually. After using one for the Staccato, I picked one up for the DWX Compact, and it made everything extremely efficient. Probably cut mag loading time by about 2/3.
I tried my upLULA on the 2024C magazine. It does work, but after watching a couple of videos of the Speed Beez, I'm getting one. Thanks for the tip.
Looking forward to hearing what they have to say - that's a pretty big deal for them to be doing these mags, when the only gun using it had about a 2-year run.
No substantive reply yet, but it's only been 2 business days. I did get some Zendesk automated reply with a few articles that were unrelated to the inquiry.
For anyone who has a Staccato C: as a general rule with discontinued guns, expect aftermarket options to decrease steadily and possibly quickly. Get everything you might expect to need for it without waiting.

Aftermarket support will just fade away, especially with things extremely specific to the C - triggers especially will probably be vaporware in 10 years. Holster options are already limited. Fewer companies will provide fewer options for optics plates. And a supply-chain shock can make mags absolutely unobtainable for long stretches. I've seen all of this before with different guns that, when I bought them, everything was flush in the aftermarket space. Now I can't find anything for them.
Unless something surprising happens this week, I think I'm just going to go with some more OEM magazines from Staccato. 17 rounds is enough for me.
 
I tried my upLULA on the 2024C magazine. It does work, but after watching a couple of videos of the Speed Beez, I'm getting one. Thanks for the tip.

No substantive reply yet, but it's only been 2 business days. I did get some Zendesk automated reply with a few articles that were unrelated to the inquiry.

Unless something surprising happens this week, I think I'm just going to go with some more OEM magazines from Staccato. 17 rounds is enough for me.
I just ordered 2 more C mags from Staccato last friday. I got a shipping notice this morning. I'll slowly get a few more over the next couple months.
 
My C was received today. Two magazines isn’t going to cut it for me. Any updates on the 10 you purchased and whether you would lean towards MBX over OEM? Were there any other aftermarket you considered?
I have the MBX Slimline 17 round magazines for mine and I absolutely love them. They do stick out a hair further than the OEM mags, but I also have a magwell installed on mine and that takes care of that issue. But I love my mbx magazines. They are pricey but personally since I have the compact grip I think it's the money. I now have a more concealable grip and I have more or less the same capacity as a full size.
 
Read through this, and wanted to hear from folks who own the C, and have good round counts behind one. I have a chance to pick one up, decent price, not great.
Generally companies improve on designs, is this a must buy? Or was it just a solid gun that folks wanted to see stay in production?
I have no desire to run glock mags, am I missing other key elements of their new lineup? Specific info appreciated.
 
I have a full size c and a cs. It’s as close to a 1911 grip with higher capacity as you can get. The C is a great shooter. Fantastic balance of capacity to shootability.

I’m a fan. That said I’m looking to pick up a hd p4x because I like my XC so much.

If you can get it for a good price I’d say go for it. If a proprietary mag that is discontinued bothers you I’d take a look at the compact GP arms 3.1” Forza, Atlas NYX, or the Guncrafter X3
 
Thank you.

I should also mention, I get a good discount on current production models, so weighing that as a factor as well, as the C is not part of that.

I don't hate glock mags, was just mentioning if that was the only "upgrade" and or reason for the new line, doesn't mean much on my end.
 
Read through this, and wanted to hear from folks who own the C, and have good round counts behind one. I have a chance to pick one up, decent price, not great.
Generally companies improve on designs, is this a must buy? Or was it just a solid gun that folks wanted to see stay in production?
I have no desire to run glock mags, am I missing other key elements of their new lineup? Specific info appreciated.
It's good to go. I picked one up and 18 mags (to not have to load at matches) a while ago and I've been shooting with it. I have no interest in anything else they make and wonder why it got discontinued. Thought about grabbing a CS to carry hunting but kinda forgot about it. I'll continue to carry my 43x for that.

I got challenged recently to go back to single stack so I may put it away for a while but its a great pistol. I shoot mine with irons but have the red dot and plate for it stashed away.
 
Read through this, and wanted to hear from folks who own the C, and have good round counts behind one. I have a chance to pick one up, decent price, not great.
Generally companies improve on designs, is this a must buy? Or was it just a solid gun that folks wanted to see stay in production?
I have no desire to run glock mags, am I missing other key elements of their new lineup? Specific info appreciated.

Long response to a short question, but it seems you want details, so...

I've put a few thousand on mine, and have a hard time seeing how they could functionally improve on it much as a production 2011. It really is a special gun - 20 years ago, it would have been an absolute grail gun. There are a couple of things I don't care for, but they're minor and are definitely outweighed by the positives.

Among other positives, it's deceptively thin, and seems to shoot softer than most guns in the commander size. It's completely controllable and fast as hell at speed, though not quite at the level of a bigger, tuned competition gun, of course. Mine's been 100% reliable thus far, with a wide variety of factory and reman ammo, including some aguila low-recoil training ammo. The slide serrations and the grip texture are also both deceptively grippy and effective - it's not obvious visually, it shows up as soon as you start manipulating the gun. Haven't had any problems with any of the mags yet, but they're relatively low cycle-count still.

The only things I've changed to the gun have been a short trigger, a Dawson magwell (original is absolutely fine), and the sear spring, which is probably the biggest functional change. The factory spring is pretty heavy, leaving both the trigger pull and the grip-safety weight heavier than I like. Swapped it out for a C&S lightweight spring, barely tuned it, and both are much more acceptable. In my sample, the trigger isn't as crisp as I'd like it - there's a bit more creep than the 1911/2011s I'm used to, but I'm assuming it's that way for enhanced durability and reliability, so I don't intend to do anything about it. Especially as it's not affecting accuracy/performance in my hands, from what I can tell.

The mags are another minor con - their geometry leaves them 1-2 rounds shy of other mags the same height, for no functional benefit I can tell. They could have used CZ 75 or other proven mags, without any increase in grip width or reliability problems. They're also so heavily sprung that using a speed loader is almost necessary for the last round or two, especially if you're loading a lot of mags. But on the whole, a minor issue.

While I haven't handled the HD line much, the biggest differences seem to be that the HDs are wider, with an ambi slide release, along with the glock mag thing and the grip angle change. They also mount the rear sight in front of the optic's lens, which may have some utility, but I'm not sure how much. I've also been hearing that you pretty much need to use the metal mec-gar mags, as the mag catch in the HDs can tear up the plastic glock mags, and those mags also don't seem to be as secure as the metal ones. Something about being able to pull the plastic ones out without pressing the mag release, but not sure on the details. I've also been hearing that some of the HDs are a bit lube sensitive, and need a refresh at lower round counts than other Staccatos, but again, this isn't personal experience.

Between the C and the HD series, I don't think I'd characterize the differences as an improvement, rather than just differences for intended purposes/preferences. But to be honest, there may be shooting performance differences I just wouldn't know, given I don't have any time on the HDs, and between the different slide lengths and compensator options, there might be something there. Still surprised they discontinued the C, as it blows just about everything else from other manufacturers away, as a stock, out-of-the-box commander sized duty gun. Maybe Staccato has just figured out how to make the HD more efficiently than earlier designs?

If I had to sum up the C as a package...I just don't see how a commander-sized duty/field 2011 could really be improved upon very much, as a production gun. If someone were allowed only 1 handgun, this would be it - it's not too big to be concealable, it's not so small as to be a pain to shoot, it's stone-cold reliable, and absolutely has all the shootability, capacity, and accessory options to be an excellent real-world fighting handgun. To improve on it much in any direction (competition, CCW, etc), you'd have to make notable design/size changes. It's an apex omnivore, do-all goldilocks gun. And to my younger me, an absolute grail gun I'd have done whatever necessary to acquire. Knowing it's been discontinued after only 2 years in production somehow makes it a little more special. One of the best gun purchases I've made, and very happy I picked mine up.
 
Appreciate the info Gents!

I spoke to a buddy that said the HD C4X is night and day better, due to the integral comp......so now just when I was ready to grab a C, the consideration of reduced muzzle flip has me back to square one. The discount puts in right in the same ballpark.
Without shooting both, side by side-who knows.
 
Appreciate the info Gents!

I spoke to a buddy that said the HD C4X is night and day better, due to the integral comp......so now just when I was ready to grab a C, the consideration of reduced muzzle flip has me back to square one. The discount puts in right in the same ballpark.
Without shooting both, side by side-who knows.

If you end up going with the C4X, it'd be great to see a review of it at some point.
 
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