A VERY good handgun- for most puposes. Durable, reliable, accurate, and powerful.
Now, that is a question that many will have differing opinions about, but here are some things to think over: * A revolver or deringer is more reliable than an autoloader because they do not rely on the firing of a round to feed the next round. * I am partial to my Colt M1911, but it is a design which is almost a century old, and there may be a more modern autoloader to beat it in terms of reliability. * The Russian Tokarev is very reliable because of its magazine design, and feed jams are virtually eliminated. * Any handgun is only as reliable as the ammunition you use.
Most new production handguns are reliable. Popular choices would include Springfield XD, all models of Glock and HK handguns. Most new reliable production models are reliable. There are, in fact, production models sold every day in gun stores for $200 - $300 that are not reliable. About once a week or so someone brings a brand new gun into the training facility where I work and after just a few shots, the slide or some other major component of the gun actually breaks. Not long ago, someone brought in a brand new, never fired handgun they bought for $250, and after 14 shots, the slide cracked and fell off the gun onto the floor. It was in fact, a brand new production model, but that is not in any way what I would call reliable. Glocks, Sigs, HK, most Smith and Wessons, and many other models are reliable. Most cheap guns are not reliable.
they jam sometimes, not the most reliable gun for that reason, and accuracy is no better than handgun without a foregrip that makes it a AOW, needs a tax stamp from atf.
The most accurate handgun is the CZ 75 SP-01 and it retails at around $600 - $700.
A water pistol.
No
Handgun
In most circumstances, no. The bullet is too large to chamber in the handgun.
Reliable? Hmm. Peter knew the most about Jesus but was not reliable. I'd say that Paul was the most reliable witness.
handgun
Unknown