Shootout: How Does The Glock 29 Stack Up To The World's Best Guns?

November 6, 2019 Topic: Security Blog Brand: The Buzz Tags: GlockFirearmGunMilitaryTechnology

Shootout: How Does The Glock 29 Stack Up To The World's Best Guns?

 

Key point: Glock dates back to the 1980s and is still going strong.

Long before the term “industry disruption” became a buzz phrase, Gaston Glock upended the firearms industry with his Glock 17 pistol. Rugged, accurate, reliable and with a large magazine capacity, Glock’s pistols became wildly successful. As the company redirected the interests of commercial shooters it also embraced larger-bore guns with loyal followings, producing such firearms as the subcompact 10mm Glock 29 and .45 ACP Glock 30.

 

The history of Glock dates back to the early 1980s, when knife and bayonet maker Gaston Glock got whiff of a competition to procure a new handgun for the Austrian Army. With no handgun design experience, Glock plunged into developing a pistol for the contract. After much research and development he produced the Glock 17. The pistol was made of polymer and steel, producing a lightweight handgun with an emphasis on reliability. Pointable (the ability of the pistol to act as a natural extension of a shooter’s hand-eye coordination) and highly accurate, it won the army contract and then went on to literally conquer the world.

Glock’s design proved scaleable in both physical size and caliber. The original, full-size Glock 17 begat a smaller, compact Glock 19 and later the subcompact Glock 26. The pistol’s action was scaled downward from the original 9mm Luger to .380 Auto, and upward to .40 Smith & Wesson, .45 ACP and other heavier calibers. The production of the essentially the same handgun in different sizes and calibers made transitioning from one Glock to another easy. Glock’s line of handguns were the first to become an ecosystem of small guns and large, in a variety of calibers, all based on an original handgun design.

In the late 1990s, after marketing full-size 10mm and .45 ACP Glocks, the company decided to skip compact size frames and go straight to subcompact. The result is the Glock 29 in 10mm Auto and the Glock 30 in .45 ACP. Although dimensionally similar, the two handguns have different purposes and fulfill different roles.

The 10mm Auto Glock 29 was designed for those interested in home defense, regular gun enthusiasts and hunters. The 10mm Auto round, designed by firearms authority Jeff Cooper, was designed as a lighter, faster alternative to .45 ACP. A 180 grain, full metal jacket 10mm Auto cartridge will clock 1,050 feet per second at the muzzle—still subsonic speed but considerably faster than .45 ACP. Lighter 10mm Auto rounds will clock up to 1,500 feet per second, comfortably in the supersonic range. By comparison, a 230 grain full metal jacket .45 ACP round will achieve a muzzle velocity of just 890 feet per second. The 10mm Auto round also produces greater energy at the muzzle and is more compact.

The Glock 29 and Glock 30 are remarkably similar in outside appearance. The two pistols both have an overall length of 6.88 inches with a barrel length of 3.77 inches. The Glock 29 weighs 26.83 ounces unloaded and the Glock 30 weighs just half an ounce less. Both pistols have a width of 1.27 inches and a height between 4.45 inches (Glock 29) and 4.80 inches (Glock 30).

Trigger pull and trigger travel are identical not just to one another but all Glocks, with the standard 5.5-pound trigger pull and .49 inches of trigger travel. This consistency makes it easier to transition from one Glock type to another—a plus for shooters and a boon for Glock marketing. The Glock 29 and Glock 30 both take ten-round, double-stacked magazines—the first pistols to pack so many rounds into a large caliber subcompact frame at the time of their introduction. Like other subcompact Glocks, the 10mm Auto and .45 ACP versions will accept magazines meant for their full-size versions, with fifteen rounds for the Glock 29 and thirteen rounds for the Glock 30.

The 10mm Auto Glock 29 and .45 ACP Glock 30 are powerful, reliable pistols in their own right, even without their subcompact attributes a factor. Glock’s big-bore subcompacts are similar pistols designed to fulfill very different tasks: hunters will appreciate the 10mm Auto’s extra muzzle energy during a dangerous hunt, while homeowners will appreciate the .45 ACP’s lower velocity indoors. The gun that disrupted an industry has proven versatile enough to break new ground and conquer new markets.

Kyle Mizokami is a defense and national-security writer based in San Francisco who has appeared in the Diplomat, Foreign Policy, War is Boring and the Daily Beast. In 2009, he cofounded the defense and security blog Japan Security Watch. You can follow him on Twitter: @KyleMizokami. This article first appeared last year.

Image: Creative Commons.