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▲Court Records Reveal Sig Sauer Knew of Pistol Risks for Yearssmokinggun.org
159 points by eoskx 6 hours ago | 157 comments
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TheJoeMan 3 hours ago [-]
This is a completely incorrect interpretation of a FMEA (failure-modes-and-effects-analysis) / "Risk Chart". ISO quality systems regulations / the army mandate engineers sit in a room and dream up every way the device could fail and/or harm someone. You then classify the risk of that harm, so in all cases an unintentional discharge would be "high risk". This does not mean the pistol has a high chance of discharging, that is a separate metric for odds of occurrence. Even if the pistol was redesigned to only have a 1 in a million chance of unintentionally discharging, the "risk" category would stay "high".
roland35 2 hours ago [-]
At least while I was at NASA, a high impact score (ie death) would still elevate total risk even if the likelihood was low.
ajross 2 hours ago [-]
> [Nerds] sit in a room and dream up every way the device could fail and/or harm someone

Well, yeah. And as it happened they postulated the failure mode that was actually (allegedly) seen in practice. And they were right. So the "no one could have known" side of Sig's defense seems out the window here. They could have known, and they did, and relevant experts told them.

I really don't get your point here. You seem to be saying that risk analysis, in the abstract, as a whole field of practice, has no value because of the lack of certainty? But... managing uncertainty is the whole point. Do you really live your life like this? "I mean, people say fentanyl is dangerous but you never really know, right?"

dddgghhbbfblk 1 hours ago [-]
I don't understand the snark. It's plain to see that the GP is arguing that the media report is misunderstanding the document.

Whether that's a correct critique or not, I don't know, but your reply is certainly misunderstanding their comment.

12 minutes ago [-]
alephnerd 2 hours ago [-]
They don't care.

"The Smoking Gun" is part of the Everytown Support Fund [0], which has been lobbying for gun abolitionism. It was created in opposition of the NRA by Michael Bloomberg [1]

Just like how the NRA would skew stats against any form of gun control, an organization like Everytown would skew facts the other way around.

Firearm abolitionism and unrestricted firearm access are both equally dumb.

There is a middle ground that can be found, but the extremes on both sides make it impossible to compromise. Gun ownership is a 2nd amendment right and often needed in areas with limited population density and access to police or animal control services (try dealing with packs of feral hog like most rural communities in the American West - can't be done without .223 calibre ammo), but that doesn't mean we can't add safety and training requirements given that there is a real issue with gun smuggling that is exacerbating crime across the Americas as well as the inability to prevent and flag high risk individuals from purchasing weapons (especially via private sales).

IMO, an Israeli style model would be best - Israelis are allowed to own a private weapon, but are required to get tested and recertified every year AND need to show that they have a gun locker. All weapons are also registered and cataloged, and all gun sales need to be notified and allowed by the Ministry of Public Safety.

If Israel can do it, the US absolutely can as well.

[0] - https://smokinggun.org/about/

[1] - https://www.everytown.org/about-everytown/history/

psunavy03 2 hours ago [-]
The Swiss model would be a much more reasonable approach. Shall-issue purchase permit on passing a background check, and the requirement to keep the firearm locked up when not used. But if you live alone, your locked front door counts as "locked up."

Statistically, the problem isn't keeping scary guns away from everyone, because the vast majority of people will never shoot anyone. The whole "you're more likely to shoot a household member than an intruder" is a red herring, because the vast majority will do neither of these things. What matters is disarming the suicidally depressed, as well as a subset of people who are disproportionately likely to commit violent crime. 60-85 percent of gun deaths in the US are suicides, jurisdiction dependent. The prototypical gun homicide in the US is a young minority man with a criminal record being killed by another young minority man with a criminal record using an illegally-possessed handgun, usually involving street gang disputes and/or the illegal drug trade.

So what matters is being able to disarm people who exhibit violent tendencies and/or suicidal depression "left of bang."

dmoy 1 hours ago [-]
> The Swiss model would be a much more reasonable approach. Shall-issue purchase permit on passing a background check, and the requirement to keep the firearm locked up when not used. But if you live alone, your locked front door counts as "locked up."

This describes how it works in Seattle, WA.

psunavy03 35 minutes ago [-]
Except Washington has rolled out broad-based bans which statistically do nothing except harass law-abiding citizens. I live in Greater Seattle, and the vibe seems to be much more "ban them all" than "how do we responsibly have these tools in society." The attitude here towards guns is as irrational as the attitude in Mississippi towards people having gay sex.

The Swiss will sell you your service rifle converted to semi-auto when you leave the military, yet somehow these "assault weapons" don't cause them problems.

throwup238 1 hours ago [-]
Washington is a must-issue concealed carry state though. When working at Microsoft I had to sign something saying I’d keep my gun in my car when on campus.
alephnerd 2 hours ago [-]
> So what matters is being able to disarm people who exhibit violent tendencies and/or suicidal depression "left of bang."

I agree

> The Swiss model would be a much more reasonable approach. Shall-issue purchase permit on passing a background check, and the requirement to keep the firearm locked up when not used. But if you live alone, your locked front door counts as "locked up."

I disagree simply because unlike CH, our neighboring states like Mexico, Haiti, and Jamaica are all facing severe public security issues due to US originated gun trafficking, and this blows back into the US.

Adding some additional securitization to our rules more in line with those in Israel allow us to help defend ourselves from contagion.

If the party that support the 2nd amendment also views organized crime in Mexico and Haiti as a national security risk, then using the securitization framing is an easier sell.

multjoy 2 hours ago [-]
Yes, but then you'd have to create a database of gun purchases and that would be illegal.

https://www.thetrace.org/2016/08/atf-non-searchable-database...

alephnerd 2 hours ago [-]
You can drop the weapons catalog requirement that Israel has, and you would still add significant guardrails against misuse.

Even without Israeli style gun cataloging, the rest of the Israeli gun control requirements should be able to pass the "objective criteria" test from Buren while also reducing the risk of misuse by tying license ownership with criterias such as mental health, training, and access to safe storage.

multjoy 2 hours ago [-]
Oh, I entirely agree. It just seems absolutely nuts that the US government (or rather the state governments, because ultimately they'd be dealing with it) cannot attribute a gun to a purchase because they've specifically made it illegal to do so.

When you're dealing with that mindset, no wonder gun control measures as unremarkable as mandatory safes and training are anathema.

alephnerd 1 hours ago [-]
As a former legislative assistant during the Aurora shooting, it's because gun abolitionists and gun fundamentalists are extremely organized interest groups, and risk your chances during a primary.

There is a silent majority that feels the 2nd amendment and gun control can co-exist, but they are not represented by any type of organized lobbying group so that voice is not heard.

It's also become a culture war signifier, so if you are a D who is fine with controlled gun ownership instead of abolition, you will face severe lobbying from Everytown, and if you are a R who is fine with controlled permitting instead of maximalist shall-issue licensing, you will face severe lobbying from the NRA.

inglor_cz 2 hours ago [-]
"If Israel can do it, the US absolutely can as well."

This is not just a matter of technical ability.

In practice, you cannot simply bypass current reading of the 2nd Amendment by SCOTUS, unless you have enough support to amend the Constitution again. Which, on this controversial topic, no one has.

alephnerd 2 hours ago [-]
I know, and my argument is that the Israeli model can be safely argued as falling within the current reading of the 2nd amendment, especially after NYSRPA v. Bruen

The reading of Buren allows control on concealed carry and gun ownership via objective criteria - which is what Israeli gun permitting rests on as well.

Yet, I have never seen a single organization fight for an Israeli style compromise for gun control in the US - almost all lawfare is either for abolitionism or unrestricted ownership.

dogleash 37 minutes ago [-]
This guy FMEAs.

The harm is always a property of the failure, independent from the likelihood. The the combination of the two independent values is usually a lookup in a grid to some score. I’m not gonna look at an FMEA in my leasure time, but if there was something juicy it’d be in the article text and it didn’t convince me.

OptionOfT 14 minutes ago [-]
I wonder if a manual safety here would've helped. There is this idea in the gun world that a gun has multiple safeties, like a trigger safety, striker safety etc, disassembly safety, disconnector safety, ...

And the way they are presented is in a way that they stack. But they don't.

Let's say the striker safety has failed and you drop the gun. It goes off. Even if you have a trigger safety. Or a disconnector safety.

danielvf 2 hours ago [-]
So the important bit here is that the guns failed drop testing. And that's bad.

The rest of the article seems to misunderstand FMEA style "write down every conceivable bad scenario in the universe, how bad it is, and then what you have done to stop it", and then spins this as "look at all these horrible known issues they knew about". I hope a jury doesn't view it the same way, because it would be an epic bad for safety everywhere if engineers writing down a list of bad things to avoid and mitigate was forbidden by company lawyers.

wl 2 hours ago [-]
The important bit is that the guns failed drop testing and then Sig Sauer updated the design to fix the issue.
yold__ 4 hours ago [-]
In a nutshell, the defect that causes the guns to fire when holstered occurs when there is a small amount of pressure on the trigger. If the slide (top part of the gun) is wiggled / nudged, it will fire. Also, the gun can fire when dropped. Both these issues are mitigated by other manufacturers with a trigger safety and longer trigger pull.
potato3732842 4 hours ago [-]
>Both these issues are mitigated by other manufacturers with a trigger safety and longer trigger pull.

And just not having hot dog down a hallway tolerances at the slide to frame interface.

The trigger stuff lives in the bottom half of the gun and the bang stuff lives in the top half and only goes bang depending upon the relative position of the trigger stuff. So allowing the top half and the bottom half to move around a ton is generally unwise unless you make accommodations elsewhere in the design so that you still have proper relative position regardless of where in the hallway the hotdog is.

alexpotato 4 hours ago [-]
There are videos online showing that this also happens with Glocks (when the trigger is depressed to the wall) [0]

Really, any gun where the sear is in the grip and the part it connects to is in the frame could have the same issue.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OaV32HarnRY

pclmulqdq 2 hours ago [-]
I think Jared's video is good at conveying the mechanics of striker-fired guns, and he is completely correct that this issue exists to some degree in every striker-fired gun (and is not an issue in them). However, the parts in the P320 have so much variance that the wall is very "mushy" on some of these guns. I wouldn't be surprised if we find that these uncommanded discharges involve both movement in the trigger and movement of the slide.

It may be the case that variance is so wide that there are some P320's which are in that "depressed to the wall" state at rest, but that would require an x-ray or CAT scan of the offending guns, and I don't know if anyone other than Sig has one. There is also a safety on P320's that should be stopping this from happening, but again, it is a part with very wide variation, and on some guns it seems it doesn't work (Sig issued a recall over this already).

I agree with Jared that this problem is a lot trickier and weirder than people give it credit for. The sort of core of the issue is that everything about the gun was done cheaply and they flew a little too close to the sun, but I believe they have no idea what in particular they cheaped out on too much.

oflannabhra 1 hours ago [-]
I understand your speculation on the amount of variance, but I haven't seen any data to support it.

Sig's "recall" was a drop-safety issue, where in certain orientations the weight of the trigger could generate enough momentum to allow an unintentional discharge.

CoastalCoder 2 hours ago [-]
I'm curious what the different levels of "cheaping out" saved in terms of manufacturing cost.
pclmulqdq 1 hours ago [-]
So am I. I expect that Sig doesn't know what to fix here because taking every part up to be more precise is very expensive.
jabedude 4 hours ago [-]
This video does not show a Glock firing with a "small amount of pressure on the trigger", which is what the OP said the issue w/ the P320 is
bastawhiz 4 hours ago [-]
I'm pretty sure you're not implying otherwise, but it's an outrageous design flaw regardless and selling these while being aware of the problem (to the military no less!) should carry devastating consequences for the manufacturers.
jibe 3 hours ago [-]
The gun firing when the trigger is being pulled is not a design flaw, and it is 100% mitigated with the safety that the military has in their guns.
oflannabhra 1 hours ago [-]
I think one of the best demonstrations of this, with detail on the amount of travel required for most striker-fired handguns is this video [0]. Lots of detail and relatively methodical.

[0] - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L17Mq7XxtlE

bhickey 3 hours ago [-]
Glock, unlike Sig, uses a trigger safety. It doesn't just require any trigger pressure, the lever safety needs to be pushed back. Is this bad? Of course. The Sig flaw is sig-nificantly worse.
galangalalgol 4 hours ago [-]
So a classic sig double action or 1911 wouldn't be effected? He video says striker fired specifically. Cocked and locked I'm not sure how you would make this happen.
pclmulqdq 2 hours ago [-]
Hammer-fired guns have a similar issue if you drop them directly on the hammer (or on parts that can move the hammer) when the hammer is cocked. When the hammer is not cocked, there's no available energy in the firing mechanism to discharge the gun. Striker fired guns are effectively in the cocked state at rest, though. In a "cocked and locked" state, you would need the drop to disengage or overcome the safety, not just the normal trigger mechanism.
nradov 3 hours ago [-]
Not affected in the same way. The original M1911 design has a floating firing pin held back only by spring tension, so in theory it might be possible to get it to discharge without pressing the trigger by dropping it straight onto the muzzle from a sufficient height. This is so unlikely in practice that it's not a real concern. Some newer variants also incorporate an extra internal safety that blocks the firing pin from moving.
WillPostForFood 2 hours ago [-]
1911, and 2011 going off when dropped:

https://www.youtube.com/shorts/wD9-6GUkTUk

https://www.youtube.com/shorts/eT1tlBR1W-w

galangalalgol 2 hours ago [-]
With the safety on too. Interesting
WillPostForFood 2 hours ago [-]
You have to partially pull the trigger to release the safety lever on the stiker. Once you do that, all bets are off, you have manually overridden one of the main designed safety features.

It is like saying, if you tape the trigger safety down on the Glock and drop it can go off, therefore it is a design defect.

conartist6 1 hours ago [-]
You're kidding me right? I thought guns were at least somewhat safe in general but putting the trigger safety on the trigger is...

I'm used to the kind of engineering where the goal is not to kill people I guess...

Modified3019 42 minutes ago [-]
I believe you may be confusing the type of safeties that block even intentional firings with safeties that try to block unintended firings (such as from drops or other mechanical stress). Pistols have multiple levels of safeties involved.

A trigger safety is meant to ensure that the trigger must be intentionally pulled (as opposed to moving during an impact) for the firing pin to be able to release and hit cartridge primer.

The 1911 famously has a grip safety, which needs to be depressed for the trigger to move. This is to try to ensure someone has to be gripping it with intent to fire, for it to be able to do so. While much safer than other pistols at the time, 100+ years later the design is relatively flawed, and isn’t truly drop safe, as the firing pin can still move.

throw0101a 3 hours ago [-]
> Both these issues are mitigated by other manufacturers with a trigger safety and longer trigger pull.

And even by Sig themselves in other models. It seems to be a problem specific to the P320 / M17.

eoskx 3 hours ago [-]
Also, does not help that the US Army does NOT want this FMECA document released. From the article that is cited the US Army's project manager & legal counsel gave this response to help Sig justify keeping the document sealed:

> The Army position would be to oppose the distribution to the public of the > FMECA document as it potentially reveals critical information about the > handgun (design, reliability, performance, etc.).

lazide 4 hours ago [-]
Also, they’ve had numerous issues with their triggers failing to reset correctly and/or otherwise misbehaving. That was the focus of the original ‘voluntary upgrade’.

That this giant mess of bad tolerances, sloppy change management, iffy manufacturing outsourcing, and a design which is sensitive to these issues it seems inevitable these kinds of random and hard to reproduce problems would occur. And the more they sold, the worse it would get.

Do that in something which literally can cause death and serious injury if it fails, in an environment where all your competitors designs don’t have these issues and hence users tend towards ‘round in the chamber’ and carrying them in all sorts of messy real world situations? Guaranteed disaster eventually.

Bad sig.

The brand was dead to me many years ago (extractor snapped in the middle of a course - seemed like bad metallurgy, or a bad design), but this is entirely another level of crazy.

joyeuse6701 3 hours ago [-]
Agreed. One of the greater examples of brand destruction of the 21st century.
sc68cal 3 hours ago [-]
>Both these issues are mitigated by other manufacturers with a trigger safety and longer trigger pull.

No. They are mitigated by a firing pin block that must be lifted by the full travel of the trigger, so that the block is lifted out of the way, for the firing pin to access the primer.

https://www.shootingillustrated.com/media/5nsj1a3l/firpins.j...

evo_9 3 hours ago [-]
You forgot to mention that the gun also needs to have a bullet chambered. Not exactly how I would carry a holstered weapon, but hey, I’m 100% certain people do exactly that. Especially in a military situation so I’m not judging.
pc86 3 hours ago [-]
"There has to be a round in the chamber for a round to be fired" seems sort of tautological if I'm being honest.

Very, very few serious people would argue that anyone carrying a firearm should carry it without a round in the chamber. Yes, "Israeli carry" is a thing, but is almost entirely endorsed simply as a training carry-over from a time when people carried different weapons of widely varying mechanical safety features in a very unique high-threat environment.

If you're carrying a firearm professionally, or in the US "recreationally" for personal protection, carrying without a round in the chamber will be seen by most people as a pretty stupid decision.

evo_9 2 hours ago [-]
As a Sig 320 owner, and someone that knows at least 3 other sig 320 owners, I disagree. None of us ever carry our weapon chambered. I probably know 10+ guys that own guns, including a few police officers, and I'm going to ask the officers about this because honestly, I would be surprised if they even carried their weapons chambered.
pc86 2 hours ago [-]
I wouldn't carry with a round in the chamber if I carried a 320 either.
somehnguy 1 hours ago [-]
There is zero chance that those police carry un-chambered
blackguardx 2 hours ago [-]
My father was taught to use condition 3 carry (unloaded chamber) with a 1911 in the 1970's US Navy. It all depends on circumstances.
2 hours ago [-]
rpmisms 2 hours ago [-]
That's exactly how guns are supposed to be carried. Exceptions exist, but if you're carrying a gun you ought to be ready to use it.
bradleyy 2 hours ago [-]
You might not, but this is exactly how a pistol like this should be carried.
CodingJeebus 4 hours ago [-]
Certainly not the first time something like this happened. During Vietnam, the US Army sent soldiers into combat with the M16 knowing that it had major issues that often caused it to jam. We’ll never know exactly people were killed by such a bad decision, but it quickly became infamous early in the war.[0]

0: https://www.warhistoryonline.com/war-articles/m16-rifle-viet...

linksnapzz 3 hours ago [-]
There was nothing wrong with the M16/AR-15; the Marines had been issued the weapon in Vietnam as well (with different ammo than the army received) and it worked fine.

The issue was that the Army Bureau of Ordinance insisted on making 5.56mm ammunition with a propellant composition different from the one that Stoner had specified when designing the weapon, one that was entirely unsuitable and led to jamming.

XorNot 2 hours ago [-]
Yes but it was worse due to design problems with the gun as well, seeing as how they did change it - I.e. adding chrome plating to the chamber and barrel which reduced fouling, and actually including a proper cleaning kit.
jandrewrogers 2 hours ago [-]
The chrome lining was done to significantly increase the service life of the barrel and to reduce corrosion in some environments. Prior to the M16, chrome lining was only used on machine guns due to the volume of rounds that went through them.

Far more rounds were put through the M16 by soldiers than prior weapons like the M14. Despite the chrome lining, M16 barrels still wear out over time and have to be replaced.

jandrewrogers 2 hours ago [-]
There was nothing wrong with the M16, it worked very well for a number of years. Then the US Army unilaterally modified the ammunition to save money in such a way as to make it no longer within specification for the weapon. Predictably, the use of out-of-spec ammunition caused issues.

The Army never changed the ammunition back. Instead, the weapon was modified (M16A1) to be compatible with the formerly out-of-spec ammunition and the issues went away.

You can't blame the M16 for the US Army using ammunition that wasn't fit for purpose.

gnfargbl 4 hours ago [-]
A dishonourable mention for the original A1 version of the British SA80, which required high levels of lubrication to operate properly, and as a result often jammed in sandy environments... like Kuwait and Iraq [1].

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SA80

KaiserPro 4 hours ago [-]
I seem to recall the A0 also used to yeet the magazine when you ran with it across your chest on the sling, because the mag release button had no guard (but that might be me misremembering it. )
giantg2 4 hours ago [-]
And the Berretta slide failures. And many similar issues for all kinds of things.
tylerflick 4 hours ago [-]
I was going to mention this! I was on a range and watched a slide completely break in half after firing. The Beretta’s where terrible.
pc86 3 hours ago [-]
Are you referring to the M9/92? I don't own one but I've heard it's one of those guns that everyone who was issued one hates it, and everyone who bought one on the civilian market loves it - the implication being they just don't shoot it enough to run into any issues.
eoskx 4 hours ago [-]
Here are some follow-ups to the article cited. Pretty wild what Sig's response has been:

https://practicalshootinginsights.com/the-document-sig-sauer...

https://practicalshootinginsights.com/sig-sauer-vp-consumer-...

https://practicalshootinginsights.com/new-unsealed-sig-sauer...

https://practicalshootinginsights.com/a-year-before-the-army...

poleguy 4 hours ago [-]
This article makes me wonder about comparative analysis against other models and brands. It is good Sig Sauer produced a failure mode analysis. Where are the competitive analysis documents?

It also makes me wonder if the reason it can't fix some of these issues is because it is working around patent issues.

Pure speculation.

eoskx 4 hours ago [-]
It appears based on some other court documents that Sig with the P320 intentionally excluded a trigger tab safety based on marketing decisions to be competitive, which every other striker-fired handgun has included. That along with some other issues appears to be the basis for where the P320 design went wrong.
dmoy 1 hours ago [-]
> This article makes me wonder about comparative analysis against other models and brands. It is good Sig Sauer produced a failure mode analysis. Where are the competitive analysis documents?

Presumably buried in the woods along with whatever shenanigans went down to award XM17 to Sig over Glock without going through the full predescribed testing in the first place

lazide 4 hours ago [-]
The reason they can’t fix these issues is someone in leadership likely literally has Narcissistic Personality Disorder, and is quite literally incapable of acknowledging a mistake or problem. To the point they’ll inevitably torpedo the company rather than take any ownership or responsibility.

If the Board is smart, they’ll fire the person before it gets to that point - but if they were smart, they probably wouldn’t have hired the type of person to get them into this mess in the first place.

pc86 2 hours ago [-]
What is the personality disorder that makes someone with no medical training believe they can diagnose "likely" mental health disorders in Generic Executive in a company they have no direct relationship with?
cypherpunks01 3 hours ago [-]
> "In a company of our size, would anyone ever believe that there was a real issue going on, and we wouldn’t address it?"

*awkward silence*

andrewflnr 2 hours ago [-]
> someone in leadership likely literally has Narcissistic Personality Disorder

What a wild, unjustified claim. Not every arrogant fool has NPD. If you want to throw that claim around you best be ready to cite the clinical definition.

gosub100 4 hours ago [-]
That's not really an Occam's Razor conclusion. I would say the reason is that multiple lawsuits were already filed, and to admit the gun was defective essentially means you lose all the suits overnight. At the time, they chose to ride it out because they didn't know how many of these guns were actually defective.

My guess is it was a perfect storm where the defect rate was low enough to escape their quality control but high enough (or perhaps delayed long enough, meaning it takes years for the defect to appear) to lead to a clear signal after the horse got out of the barn. Enough suits were filed that they perhaps risk bankruptcy if they lose all of them.

That's just my speculation, and seems to be more plausible than some side effect from mental illness.

thorncorona 4 hours ago [-]
> In that statement, the company also blamed the “anti-gun mob” for attacks on the P320.

lol, no words left to describe this.

WillPostForFood 2 hours ago [-]
You are commenting on a post written by "Everytown for Gun Safety" one of the largest gun control groups in the country, so this is definitely part of a campaign by the “anti-gun mob”.
YesThatTom2 4 hours ago [-]
[flagged]
phatskat 2 hours ago [-]
Are you referring to [Harlon Cater: the man who militarized the cops and the NRA](https://open.spotify.com/episode/1KenPS9FUFfumy2D3auvuR?si=F...)?
pc86 2 hours ago [-]
I've only been around "gun culture" for 5-6 years or so, but not a single person I know in the fairly conservative area of my fairly conservative state thinks talking shit about a gun company means you're anti-gun - especially Sig which everyone hates now.

Nobody takes the NRA seriously or cares anything about what they do, either, so maybe I just happen to be in a sane pocket of the culture but other than the obvious paid shills like GBRS who are terrible human beings anyway, even on YouTube and other sources everyone has been talking shit on Sig for a year or longer.

seanw444 1 hours ago [-]
> maybe I just happen to be in a sane pocket of the culture

Same in my circle too. NRA is perceived as an embezzling joke that spends more on yachts than preserving the right to keep and bear arms, and Sig is an untrustworthy joke that is allergic to taking accountability.

lazide 4 hours ago [-]
Eh, this is someone in SIG leadership using every scapegoat and excuse they can to avoid having to acknowledge or take responsibility for their screwup, instead compounding it to the point where it will seriously hurt the company - maybe even torpedo them.

The things you’re talking about give them some cover/mechanisms, but most other manufacturers are looking on in horror at this, not copying them.

jordanb 3 hours ago [-]
Yeah American gun culture is now substantially LARPers kitting up like they're going to the front lines.

Ironically they call people who are into sportsmanship "fudders" and any gun that doesn't have a picatinny rail and a 20-round clip a "fudd gun." The reference is to "Elmer Fudd."

wl 3 hours ago [-]
Being a Fudd isn't about being into sportsmanship. It's about opposing the civilian ownership of firearms besides bolt action rifles and non-semiautomatic shotguns.
kasey_junk 3 hours ago [-]
You can find Fudd being applied to all manner of behaviors, it’s certainly not universally a gun control label.

USPSA competitors will refer to IDPA competitors as Fudds just because of the scoring differences.

It’s really just like calling someone a boomer but in a gun context.

3 hours ago [-]
fudddestroyer 3 hours ago [-]
[flagged]
amanaplanacanal 3 hours ago [-]
Yes we all know the difference between a clip and a magazine. This isn't adding anything to the discussion.
pc86 2 hours ago [-]
I think the idea that if you don't know the basic names of something your opinion on it is suspect is a fair criticism. Especially with the very odd reference to a 20-round magazine. There is no state in the country where a 20-round AR magazine is legal and the standard-capacity 30-round magazine is not. Virginia has a 20-round maximum but only on handguns.
bloomingeek 2 hours ago [-]
[flagged]
joyeuse6701 3 hours ago [-]
In my circles, what was astounding was the right wing gun club were doubly offended by this attempted blame. Either because they were offended for being called anti-gun leftists for having concern over the p320 or because Sig seemed to be ducking responsibility with some Trumpian style PR. Maybe both. I recall seeing comments like “it’s not the left, they don’t even know what a f**n sear is”
giantg2 4 hours ago [-]
While I agree with the title of the article, some of the contents seem a little over the top in the way they present them. We would need to see the document to know how bad it really is. Many of the failure modes could be user dependent for lack of training (ie finger in trigger guard when holstering). They also don't say which failure modes were fixed and what remained. That said, all you need is one valid failure mode to be dangerous.

"Sig Sauer also stated that the manual safeties on M17 and M18 pistols would resolve some of the issues,"

This would only be the training dependent ones. Mechanically, the safety only blocks the trigger and does nothing to block the striker or sear.

Zak 2 hours ago [-]
> They also don't say which failure modes were fixed and what remained.

The article links a document[0] which lists them. My reading of this is that it's not listing issues that were found in the P320, but issues that can occur in handguns in general. One of the items is "unsafe hammer decock", which has never been possible with the P320 because it does not have a hammer. It is listed as eliminated.

The remaining medium risks are:

- The user might accidentally pull the trigger by resting their finger on it when they do not intend to fire the gun

- Mishandling the gun might cause a foreign object to pull the trigger

- A drop or vibration might cause the gun to fire

- The user might accidentally pull the trigger a second time due to motion during recoil

- The user may accidentally pull the trigger while clearing a jam

- A broken firing pin could lodge in the firing position, causing the gun to fire when the slide closes

- The user might accidentally pull the trigger during holstering or unholstering

- The sear might fail to retain the striker, causing an uncommanded discharge when chambering a round, or a second uncommanded shot after an intentional shot

- Defective ammunition could rupture and injure the shooter or bystanders

- Recoil can lead to repetitive motion injuries

- Incorrect disassembly and reassembly can lead to a firearm which does not function correctly

Two of these (drop/vibration, failure to retain striker) describe the current uncommanded discharge problem. Five of the issues are different ways someone with insufficient training might mishandle a gun and pull the trigger unintentionally.

[0] https://smokinggun.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/08/gov.uscour...

4 hours ago [-]
bayindirh 4 hours ago [-]
Move briskly and kill people?

That's a deadly twist to "move fast and break things" motto.

Seriously, Sig Sauer. You are making weapons, not disposable pens, and the world leading disposable pen company literally uses "standards x 1.5" as their baseline.

kotaKat 4 hours ago [-]
Sig Sauer: “You take some of the shots you don’t make”
imglorp 3 hours ago [-]
> world leading disposable pen company literally uses "standards x 1.5" as their baseline

Curious, what's this referring to?

bayindirh 3 hours ago [-]
Bic.

They make pens, lighters and razor blades, at least.

For their lighters, they use engineering resins instead of simple plastics. They have their internal standards stricter than EU ones for temperature and drop resistance.

They make their own inks for their pens according to their own standards instead of getting from someone. Their razor blades last at least 25% longer than their competitors, and they sell for much cheaper.

They are a company of contradictions. Their items are disposable, yet put many "higher tier" items to shame by being better, longer lasting and cheaper at the same time.

kergonath 1 hours ago [-]
They are fundamentally an engineering and manufacturing company. It’s the same ethos as some Japanese manufacturers who put the effort to produce reliable, accurate tools for cheap and where the marketing department haven’t taken over. They really ought to be better understood.
eoskx 4 hours ago [-]
There's another article that is cited where Sig with someone else was apparently developing the fixes to resolve these issues years before the gun was actually tested with the US Army, but didn't deploy the fixes until they were pressured:

https://practicalshootinginsights.com/a-year-before-the-army...

giantg2 4 hours ago [-]
And those "fixes" didn't fully resolve the issues.
wl 3 hours ago [-]
Those fixes apparently resolved the drop safety issues. The uncommanded discharges that have been in the news as of late—where holstered P320s seemingly discharge on their own—is an entirely separate issue. Sig denies that there's a problem, blaming holster designs, debris in holsters, and people lying to cover up their own carelessness.

One thing this article fails to mention about the Air Force incident is that the Air Force has made an arrest for "making a false official statement, obstruction of justice and involuntary manslaughter."

https://www.airforcetimes.com/news/your-air-force/2025/08/08...

giantg2 2 hours ago [-]
Sig claims the issue was resolved. Keep in mind that Sig never admitted to the issue. They only issued a voluntary upgrade and never issued a safety recall.
wl 1 hours ago [-]
Yes, Sig should have issued a recall instead of doing a "voluntary upgrade."

Nevertheless, is anyone actually claiming that the upgraded P320 is not drop safe? The issue people are talking about these days is holstered P320s apparently discharging uncommanded, apart from any drops.

jordanb 3 hours ago [-]
An important point to recognize is that gun manufacturers have almost no product liability exposure due to laws pushed by the NRA.

Of course the NRA pitched these laws to their members as protecting against gun violence victims suing the manufacturer, but they also slipped in that gun manufacturers have no legal responsibility to provide guns to buyers that do not fire unless the trigger is pulled.

Zak 3 hours ago [-]
If you're referring to the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act[0] passed in 2005, that's not true. It only bars lawsuits against gun manufacturers and dealers for criminal misuse of their products, not for hazardous defects.

Remington settled a class action lawsuit[1] concerning rifles that could fire without a trigger pull filed after the passage of that law.

[0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protection_of_Lawful_Commerce_...

[1] https://www.cnbc.com/2018/10/24/remington-rifle-settlement-i...

wl 3 hours ago [-]
You're probably referencing a New Hampshire law that prevents product liability lawsuits against gun manufacturers for not including manual safeties. That law would not prevent product liability lawsuits in cases where guns discharge without the trigger being actuated.
uticus 3 hours ago [-]
> they also slipped in that gun manufacturers have no legal responsibility to provide guns to buyers that do not fire unless the trigger is pulled.

Where does this idea come from? If this is the case, the document being discussed in the OP would not even exist, because there would be no need to document situations causing unintentional discharge.

jack_h 3 hours ago [-]
> Where does this idea come from?

It seems to be acquired through social osmosis, i.e. hearing people talk about it and then repeating their assertions as if it were a fact - usually with subtle changes colored by the speakers own world view - until some version of "truth" permeates society. I guess you could consider it like a game of telephone at a societal level. The Citizens United case is another great example where what people think it held is very different from what it actually held. It's also frustrating given the fact that we live in a time where the barrier to verify these claims is incredibly low or even non-existent because of the internet.

pc86 3 hours ago [-]
Slightly more cynical take - it comes from gun-control advocates who want to repeal all of the firearms provisions in the PLCA lying about what it does to generate more public support for its repeal.

People who just dislike guns (or dislike the people who like guns) then repeat it forever, even after proven wrong.

kergonath 1 hours ago [-]
I am sure that those people exist, by how many are they and what kind of power do they have? To me it seems that they are convenient boogeymen every time someone suggests a sensible reform that would make gun circulation less of a problem (like restrictions for criminals and mentally unstable people or background checks). I don’t doubt your sincerity, but this is just too simple a point of view for such a complex and nuanced situation.
ufmace 2 hours ago [-]
> Where does this idea come from?

Anti-gun propaganda.

Anti-gunners first started practicing lawfare against companies involved in the gun industry by suing them for crimes committed using products the companies were involved with, even though this is a ridiculous idea never applied to any other type of product. They do it because, even when the lawsuits are thrown out eventually, they are still very expensive to defend and most companies in the industry don't have particularly deep pockets.

Gun-rights advocates got laws passed in a number of jurisdictions clarifying that gun manufacturers are only liable for genuine flaws in their products. This has largely squelched these types of nuisance lawsuits.

Anti-gun activists don't like that, so they frequently spread false information that such laws prevent manufacturers from being liable for genuine flaws in their products. Despite such false claims, no law ever passed or proposed actually does this, and no law in this area has ever been repealed due to actually blocking liability for genuine flaws.

allears 2 hours ago [-]
[flagged]
jsight 3 hours ago [-]
What law does this?

All that I can find are laws limiting liability for use of a properly functioning weapon, not against defects.

eoskx 3 hours ago [-]
Keep in mind, too, that the US Army does NOT want this FMECA document released. From the article that is cited the US Army's project manager & legal counsel gave this response to help Sig justify keeping the document sealed: > The Army position would be to oppose the distribution to the public of the > FMECA document as it potentially reveals critical information about the > handgun (design, reliability, performance, etc.).
dayjah 3 hours ago [-]
When the plaintiff is the US Armed Forces, does this still hold? Surely the contract with an arm of the military doesn't have the same protections?
giancarlostoro 3 hours ago [-]
They can freeze funds and cancel future contracts, which should be enough pressure. What's wild to me is the military version was not even remotely safer.

100% the families of those affected by Sigs goof ups should sue.

phatskat 2 hours ago [-]
The NRA has been insidious since its coup back in the day and then its subsequent commandeering by the right wing as a propaganda tool: at one point, there was a popular pistol type (I don’t recall the make/model) that was really good at accidentally discharging and the NRA helped not only to shield the manufacturer from liability, but also to keep the guns in circulation because there was a specific group of people (cough black cough) who disproportionately favored this gun due to iirc low price point. It was pretty obviously a case of “well hey, if these guns are accidentally firing and killing _black folk_ then it’s not really an issue”
normie3000 4 hours ago [-]
> multiple ways the pistol could fire without an intentional trigger pull

That doesn't sound ideal.

andrepd 4 hours ago [-]
Master of the understatement :)
flerchin 3 hours ago [-]
> If someone can just show us how to replicate [these uncommanded discharges] we will absolutely look at this from all aspects to make sure there isn’t any truth to this. In a company of our size, would anyone ever believe that there was a real issue going on, and we wouldn’t address it?”

This is exactly how I sound when I get a bug that is hard to repro. Just like these guns, there's evidence that the bug happened, but it's really hard to figure out how. Still a bug. People are still dead.

zhengyi13 3 hours ago [-]
Uncommanded discharges are very well reproduced at this point.

At the very least that I'm aware of, there was initial work by Youtuber "3 P320s In A Trenchcoat" showing a series of ways to get the striker to drop w/o touching the trigger. More recently, a Youtuber with Wyoming in their channel name showed that they could reproduce them with just the slightest trigger movement in conjunction with wiggling the slide.

pc86 2 hours ago [-]
This last one is the most damning IMO. You can dismiss it because there's a screw in the trigger but he shows in a separate video that it's not actually screwed into the frame or anything - it's just there to keep the < 0.5mm of slack out of the trigger. Once that's accomplished, all you have to do is wiggle the slide around for a round to get discharged. He does it on the first attempt - even he didn't expect it to be that easy.

It's very easy to see how a police officer jostling around with a suspect or getting in and out of their car can cause the trigger and the slide to move at the right time to cause this issue.

tehwebguy 4 hours ago [-]
I wonder how many people died when police encounters were escalated to “shots fired” by their faulty Sig.

It’s one thing for a gun to go off and potentially hit someone but it’s another when the first round fired triggers 4 cops to empty a mag each.

SoftTalker 3 hours ago [-]
Are there a number of police shootings where the officer claims his gun "went off"?

One of the first rules of gun safety is never point the weapon at something you aren't intending to shoot. So by the time they are pointing their guns at a suspect, actually firing probably happens a lot? Or are cops actually trained to hold a person at gunpoint (I don't believe the TV dramas and movies where this happens constantly are realistic in this regard).

If so, it seems very risky, considering potential manufacturing or design defects such as discovered with the Sig.

pc86 2 hours ago [-]
When exactly an officer is trained to pull their firearm will vary by department.

I'm sure every defense attorney in the country is checking what firearms the officers were issued for their clients where it might make a difference.

Esophagus4 4 hours ago [-]
Well that settles it… I’m never buying a Sig Sauer
bbminner 3 hours ago [-]
> vice president of commercial sales, said, “If someone can just show us how to replicate [these uncommanded discharges] we will absolutely look at this from all aspects to make sure there isn’t any truth to this.

Am I reading it correctly: if you provide us with a detailed bug report we will make sure to properly justify why we think it is not a bug and "works as intended"? :)

barbazoo 2 hours ago [-]
Reads to me like they’re gonna get rid of you.

What a shit way to phrase this. What makes these corporate monkeys lose the ability to speak normally?

runnr_az 42 minutes ago [-]
Those guns can probably hurt someone!
santiagobasulto 3 hours ago [-]
I don't know much about guns so maybe can help me understand. How is it possible that a holstered gun has pressure in the trigger in the first place? And also, shouldn't the safety always be on?
Zak 3 hours ago [-]
Many modern handguns do not have a manually activated safety. The Sig M17/M18 does, but the safety only blocks the trigger from moving rearward far enough to fire.

It may not block the trigger from moving enough to disengage an internal, automatic safety that prevents the firing pin from traveling all the way forward if it is released due to a malfunction. It is also possible that the firing pin block safety does not always work even if the trigger is fully forward.

WillPostForFood 2 hours ago [-]
Common failures would be to use the wrong holster, defective holster, or get some object in the holster that could snag the trigger as you put it in.
joyeuse6701 3 hours ago [-]
Some guns, striker fired, do not have safeties as you may think of them.
oldpersonintx2 3 hours ago [-]
consumer versions of this pistol do not have a manual safety

they have internal safety mechanisms to prevent discharge, and these are important if you carry with a round chambered - in a striker-fired pistol, the firing pin is under tension and is only being restrained by the trigger and internal safeties

this is why I do not carry with a round chambered, if you appendix carry and something goes wrong, you will be missing an important appendage

seanw444 44 minutes ago [-]
This is why I carry a gun I trust. I keep one chambered at all times, pointing at my junk. I am not concerned about my junk. I am much more concerned about not being able to get a shot off in time if I ever need to use it.
codegeek 4 hours ago [-]
Scary to think that I almost bought a P320 before I decided against it for a different reason.
dayjah 3 hours ago [-]
Same, fortunately my local shooting range has a good selection of firearms to try. I tried the P320 and P365. I had been considering the P365, but it was so snappy I reasoned the otherwise completely boring P320 would be a better fit for my needs. However, it was close enough to another firearm I own that I decided to cool-off and see if I still wanted it in a month... then this all broke.
seanw444 37 minutes ago [-]
My girlfriend has a P365X. I wouldn't touch a P320 with a ten foot pole, but the 365 and its variants have proven pretty reliable for many people. It is definitely snappy though, but most "subcompacts" are, because physics.
dayjah 31 minutes ago [-]
Yeah, to that point I’ve been interested in trying out a Shadow Systems CRp. But haven’t found a place carrying them..
pc86 2 hours ago [-]
Not at all firearm specific, but "I'll get this tomorrow if I still remember I want it" has saved me countless thousands of dollars in my life.
pc86 2 hours ago [-]
I bought an M17 many years ago, and sold it a little over a year ago.

My local store will still take them but it's $100 store credit only.

oldpersonintx2 3 hours ago [-]
[dead]
shepardrtc 4 hours ago [-]
Note that not only has Sig Sauer lied about this and attempted to gaslight people[1], they have also sued organizations to force them to continue using the pistol after they chose to discontinue use due to the dangers[2]

----

[1] https://www.instagram.com/p/DG6RkWCpkdw/#

[2] https://www.kiro7.com/news/local/gunmaker-sues-washingtons-p...

anonu 2 hours ago [-]
There's possibly 4 million of these guns on the street. Sig should do a massive recall.
oflannabhra 54 minutes ago [-]
For anyone wanting a quick breakdown of the current situation: the Sig Sauer P320 is a striker-fired handgun, which means the firing pin is spring loaded and retained by a sear. Other handguns are hammer-fired, where the trigger (or slide actuation) cocks the hammer. Other popular striker-fired guns include the Glock and Smith and Wesson M&P series. Frequently, striker-fired pistols come without safeties, but optionally add them.

The P320 was popular as it was designed as a modular system, allowing a single FCU (firing control unit, basically a trigger and striker assembly) to be independent and swappable with other parts of the handgun: grip, slide, barrel, etc. This allows for a single platform to serve multiple needs: concealed carry, compact, full-size, or even competition models, as well as be transferrable across calibers. The magazine design also allowed for more rounds to be carried in compact configurations.

The P320 was selected by the US Army [0] as the official replacement for the Beretta M9 as a service-issued sidearm, officially designated the M17 or M18 (in 9mm).

In 2020 SIG SAUER initiated a "voluntary upgrade program" [1] that swapped various components of the trigger to prevent unintended discharge (UD) events that could occur when the pistol dropped in certain orientations. These changes became standard for the M17 and all P320 manufactured after.

Recently, there have been very high-profile cases and investigations around UD events, the most recent being by an event in the Air Force that led to the death of an airman. In that case the Air Force put a suspension on the firearm during the investigation but eventually arrested the airman responsible, as they determined he had lied about the events [2].

Regardless of the specific failure modes of the weapon, there is a stigma around it, resulting in various law enforcement agencies switching from it or ranges banning the firearm. This has been popularized by incidents caught on video and somewhat viral videos of testing the firearm in a variety of scenarios.

All in all, the P320 is one of the most mass-produced firearms in the world, and I would not be surprised to see Sig Sauer continue to fight in the court of public opinion to defend the reputation of the firearm, in what I would deem a losing strategy.

[0] - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SIG_Sauer_M17

[1] - https://www.sigsauer.com/p320-voluntary-upgrade-program

[2] - https://www.airforcetimes.com/news/your-air-force/2025/08/08...

wonderwonder 44 minutes ago [-]
Biggest issue here is the lack of clarity. I truly don't know if there is an issue with the pistol and as such I simply wont buy a Sig. The risk just isn't worth it. This is devastating for the Sig brand whether there is an issue or not. Tough spot to be in for a brand.
eoskx 6 hours ago [-]
According to a court exhibit, Sig Sauer identified several deadly risks with its P320 pistols as early as 2017.
game_the0ry 4 hours ago [-]
Even an arms manufacturer with a historic reputation for quality is vulnerable to the phenomena of Enshittification.
jabedude 4 hours ago [-]
In this case, the historic reputation for quality is entirely disconnected from the company. SIG USA shares a brand with the German and Swiss companies with the same name, but it is not the same company that made the P226
eoskx 4 hours ago [-]
All 3 entities - the German, Swiss, and US entities are owned by a German holding company L&O Holdings, but yes, the basis of the 226 was designed by the original Swiss entity.
brookst 3 hours ago [-]
“Enshitification” refers to pivoting from selling a product to selling the audience that bought the product. For instance, Windows putting ads in the start menu.

As awful as this Sig Sauer fiasco is, it doesn’t seem to be a result of a pivot to indirect monetization.

dreamcompiler 2 hours ago [-]
This is not what enshittification means. Facebook enshittified itself without ever having sold a product to its users. They were selling their users' personal data before they ever became enshittified.

Enshittification is about obtaining, then abusing platform semi-monopoly power to extract more money from your users and your customers by making your product worse.

game_the0ry 1 hours ago [-]
> Enshittification is about obtaining, then abusing platform semi-monopoly power to extract more money from your users and your customers by making your product worse.

Yeah, this is how I meant it.

In the case of Sig, it was probably cost-cutting, product management by committee, corner-cutting due to tight business reqs, or some combo of the above.

jeffWrld 3 hours ago [-]
[dead]
baggachipz 4 hours ago [-]
[flagged]
lazide 4 hours ago [-]
Few people would be surprised if a car drove forward when on, in gear, and the gas pedal is depressed.

When a specific make/model has a nasty habit of driving through the sides of garages when off and no one is touching them, and eventually runs someone over and kills them? People get concerned.

Especially when the manufacturer knew this could (and was!) happening and insisted on gaslighting everyone about it for years.

That cars can be used to run people over (and sometimes are even designed to do so effectively!) doesn’t change that. Especially since most miles driven never run anyone over at all.

baggachipz 4 hours ago [-]
I find the car = gun analogy so tired. A car's purpose is to transport, and sometimes it accidentally kills. A gun's purpose is to kill. People always say "it's a tool"... yeah, to kill. Anytime you have a device like that, unexpected killings can happen. People shoot themselves and other people accidentally all the time; not because it was not "used as intended", but because it's a killing device.
bluGill 4 hours ago [-]
I find this argument tired and poorly thought out. As a hunter there are many times kill is my goal. I also use my guns for target practice where kill is not the goal. Just because a gun's purpose is to kill does not mean it has to kill anything, or that car drivers should get off for their killing. A death is a death, it needs to be intentional killing only with either a gun or a car.

Most gun owners are very aware of how deadly their tool is, and are careful with it. Most car owners do not put anywhere near the safety thought into how they drive (it is rare to see someone maintain a 3 second following distance even though that along could save a lot of lives)

MindSpunk 4 hours ago [-]
The P320 is a service pistol used by various US military branches, police forces and other people with an obvious need to carry a gun. The design is unsafe compared to other designs. People who's job requires carrying a gun are made less safe by this pistol. How would "guns are made to kill people, so who cares" justify an unsafe design?
sitkack 4 hours ago [-]
Devices are supposed to work as intended, implied is WHEN intended. If you have a circular saw that randomly cuts when not asked, is a mature response "oh no our cutty thing cuts" ?

That is why your post was flagged. A snarky, snide response like your detracts from meaningful discussion.

baggachipz 4 hours ago [-]
> Devices are supposed to work as intended, implied is WHEN intended. If you have a circular saw that randomly cuts when not asked, is a mature response "oh no our cutty thing cuts" ?

Yes, always assume that you will get cut and treat it as such.

> That is why your post was flagged.

I don't care. I knew it was gonna get downvoted to hell. I'm not trolling, I'm trying to point out that people shouldn't be surprised when something like this happens. That's why you're "never supposed to point a gun at something you don't want to shoot", right? The logic there is that it could always go off unintentionally. In this case, it goes off unintentionally a little more often.

pc86 2 hours ago [-]
> That's why you're "never supposed to point a gun at something you don't want to shoot", right? The logic there is that it could always go off unintentionally.

I'm going to take you at your word that you're not trolling and treat this as a legitimate good faith question/argument.

The logic of that is emphatically not that guns randomly go off on their own so you do that for safety. They're not supposed to (obviously), and if you're looking at modern firearms it really only happens due to damage or massive design flaws (which would cover the 320).

The logic is that it's a Swiss cheese threat model that is designed to reduce the odds of a negligent discharge and reduce the damage should one happen (which in 99.99999% of cases is someone pulling the trigger unintentionally).

1. Treat all guns as though they are loaded - if you're ever handling a gun, the first thing you're supposed to do is visually and physically check the chamber and the magazine well that there is no magazine and an empty chamber.

2. Don't point the firearm at anything you don't want to destroy - even immediately after checking a firearm if you flag someone with it a lot of gun stores will kick you out. Even with no magazine and the slide locked back it's incredibly poor form to point it anywhere close to another person.

3. Be sure of your target and what's behind it - pretty self-explanatory and a borderline repeat of #2. In a self-defense type of scenario this also means "don't shoot at unidentified things."

4. Keep your finger off the trigger until ready to shoot - the only purpose of the trigger is to send a round downrange so there's zero reason to be messing with the trigger otherwise (one notable exception not really worth discussing here).

So it's really not "don't point the firearm at stuff you don't want to shoot" because guns occasionally go off on their own, magically, it's really "people make mistakes, the Swiss cheese model of accident causation is real, and this is one more thing to mitigate the impact of accidents when they inevitably happen."

lm28469 4 hours ago [-]
The problem in that case is that it kills unintentionally when it's used in a way that shouldn't end up in a discharge at all.

If you put your gun in your pants pocket and shoot your balls while running around it's on you, if you safely put your gun in a safe holster and it shoots your balls while your walking it's the gun's problem.

A nuke is a killing device, we never made one go boom unintentionally despite abusing some of them way past what's reasonable.

creaturemachine 4 hours ago [-]
A car's primary purpose isn't to kill or maim humans. If you think handguns are made for anything else then you're fooling yourself.
roland35 3 hours ago [-]
So much for the "guns don't shoot themselves!!" argument you occasionally hear from gun nuts. Yes they can and do shoot themselves!
pc86 2 hours ago [-]
Yes, this specific gun with this specific design issue that doesn't exist in any other firearm, and you now can't sell for more than $100 if you can sell it at all, and is banned by almost every professional shooting sports organization, and is banned by more ranges than its not can shoot by itself in very specific circumstances.

As a self-described gun nut, thought I'd make it a little more accurate :)

seanw444 39 minutes ago [-]
And sold by a company that has lost credibility with most "gun nuts" as a result of this whole years-long (now lethal) ordeal. Anti-2Aers think that we're all defending Sig for this behaviour. We're not.
Nicook 2 hours ago [-]
Arguing with such a politically loaded sentence is probably a waste of time. BUT that's obviously not the intention of the quote. Actual malfunction induced firing is the exception, and its still a good saying to help people try and be safe/mindful. Not to mention even in that case there's still some movement or action leading to it nobody is saying that the sigs will just spontaneously fire while left sitting on a table.