Quote Originally Posted by Aloha_Shooter View Post
Is it okay? No. Does it happen? Yes. The firearm should be designed to against commonplace incidents and a falling firearm falls into that category IMO. If it didn't, the military wouldn't have drop tests in the first place. This incident shows they should have additional drop tests spec'ed not that the drop tests conducted by others are irrelevant. Do you think Sig would be SO quick to stop sales if they didn't recognize a design flaw? Do you think Glock would tweak Sig the way they have if they thought there was a chance their guns would fire under the same conditions? It sounds from the descriptions like someone forgot to calculate the momentum of the trigger -- if that's all it is, lightening the mass of the trigger should address the problem.

Seriously, the denialism here is like Hillary supporters who think she won the election.
XM17 <> P320

The hysteria is over a weapon that never (technically) went through the MHS trials. Shame on Sig if they knew this was a weakness which they chose to address in the XM17 but not the P320.