Handgun Frame Material

Frame material for your primary defense handgun?

  • Aluminum Alloy

    Votes: 24 15.8%
  • Stainless Steel

    Votes: 24 15.8%
  • Non-Stainless Steel

    Votes: 42 27.6%
  • Polymer

    Votes: 55 36.2%
  • Titanium

    Votes: 3 2.0%
  • Scanadium

    Votes: 3 2.0%
  • Brass

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Zinc Alloy

    Votes: 1 0.7%
  • Carbon Fiber

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Other

    Votes: 0 0.0%

  • Total voters
    152
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My primary CCW is a Kahr K9elite98....stainless frame.

My winter gun is an aluminum-framed P220-American.
 
My current belt gun is teflon-coated carbon steel.

My current pocket gun is a steel slide on an aluminum frame.

My current purse gun has a titanium cylinder in an aluminum frame.
 
I'm not 21 yet(close, oh so close...) but if I had a handgun it would be steel. Not sure which kind(stainless/not) but I like the feel of steel.
 
After all, I did pay extra to get my Glock 17 so I could carry it through metal detectors

metal detectors can find the glock.

there is a special edition of the glock 17/19 with carbon slide and a ceramic barrel BUT it's made in VERY SMALL NUMBERS to special orders from goverment around the world

SIG & HK are making "invisible" guns as well, remember that the bullets can be seen.
 
metal detectors can find the glock.

I know. I was referring to the hoopla we had in the US when the Glock first made it's appearance and the anti's were afraid of it. It was even made famous in the movie Die Hard II.
 
there is a special edition of the glock 17/19 with carbon slide and a ceramic barrel BUT it's made in VERY SMALL NUMBERS to special orders from goverment around the world.

I don't know where you got that information, but it's completely inaccurate. There's no such Glock, nor is there any other handgun with a ceramic barrel and carbon slide.

Ceramic is hard as woodpecker lips, but too brittle for use as a barrel or slide. Carbon fiber is a reinforcing material, not suitable for primary use in major handgun components like frames or slides.

Even if you could make a weapon out of these materials, the ammunition would still be ferrous and thus detectable.
 
today there are chasis or frames of racing cars, UAV, racing bikes, combat vehicles and even the mast on those around the world yacht racing yacht is made of composite materials.

the strongest and hardest man made materials are those composites.

today the research in material engineering is so advanced that it is possible to produce things of amazing strength the only limitation is your financial standings.

as far as bullets are concerned, I believe you would not want to meet an object that flys towards you at 1200FPS even if it is not made of metal.
 
Oogee,

Composites are strong, but not hard. That's why they are used for load bearing, not friction bearing surfaces. Metal is still the most useful material for a number of things. A steel bicycle frame need only be 15% heavier than a composite one, and will last longer, for instance.

You might be able to make a ceramic barrel. There are ceramic jet turbines, after all. But there isn't going to be a reason to make a ceramic Glock, or any other gun that takes conventional cartridges. Any special Xray proof weapon is going to have to be designed from the ground up, including the ammo.

There is no special Glock.
 
Carbon fiber barrels do exist, I am fairly certain however that they have a steel lined barrel. A ceramic lined/carbon fiber reinforced barrel with the right design could work. Carbon/carbon composite would make a very light, workable frame. Also ammo does not have to be metal or even have a casing.

I still love steel!
 
It might not be produced by GLOCK, most likely to be some form of outsourcing to a specialized maker.

There are bullets made of some form of epoxy that would not be seen by magnometers – the so called “x-rayâ€.

A more frightening weapon might be all those knives made for UDT’s and combat engineering units to clear magnetically sensitive mines. Those knives are made of all kinds of materials that won’t be seen by most of the modern screening devices in airports.
I wont elaborate on that for obvious reasons.
 
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