Gear

Watch: The Grand Power P11: Full-size features in a carry gun

The Grand Power XCalibur stunned me.  From the first shot it was so smooth and easy to point that it didn’t feel like shooting.  The sensation was closer to pointing a magic long-range hole puncher at paper.  Squeeze the trigger and after a loud noise a hole appears exactly where you were pointing.  Truly ambidextrous controls, a rotating barrel that reduces felt recoil, and some of the finest machining I’ve ever encountered.  I couldn’t afford to buy one, but did anyways.  So began my love for the Grand Power line of pistols.

Clean machining and a steel chassis keep the trigger crisp.

Built in an ISO 9001 compliant factory with 4 and 5 axis CNC machines shaping parts to within +/-.005mm (that’s 0.000196”!).  For reference that’s about 1/10 the thickness of a standard sheet of paper!

If you grew up with Common Core math, we’ll summarize with this: it’s accurate.  When a gun is made of 53 parts machined with that level of accuracy one might expect some accuracy out of the gun.

You've reached your daily free article limit.

Subscribe and support our veteran writing staff to continue reading.

Get Full Ad-Free Access For Just $0.50/Week

Enjoy unlimited digital access to our Military Culture, Defense, and Foreign Policy coverage content and support a veteran owned business. Already a subscriber?

The Grand Power XCalibur stunned me.  From the first shot it was so smooth and easy to point that it didn’t feel like shooting.  The sensation was closer to pointing a magic long-range hole puncher at paper.  Squeeze the trigger and after a loud noise a hole appears exactly where you were pointing.  Truly ambidextrous controls, a rotating barrel that reduces felt recoil, and some of the finest machining I’ve ever encountered.  I couldn’t afford to buy one, but did anyways.  So began my love for the Grand Power line of pistols.

Clean machining and a steel chassis keep the trigger crisp.

Built in an ISO 9001 compliant factory with 4 and 5 axis CNC machines shaping parts to within +/-.005mm (that’s 0.000196”!).  For reference that’s about 1/10 the thickness of a standard sheet of paper!

If you grew up with Common Core math, we’ll summarize with this: it’s accurate.  When a gun is made of 53 parts machined with that level of accuracy one might expect some accuracy out of the gun.

Accurate is an understatement in this case.  As an experienced and trained shooter, I consider my ability above average, but by no means Miculek level.  The Grand Power’s transfer some of their namesake into any shooter’s abilities as demonstrated by a grouping of 15 rounds at seven yards fired in short succession.

 

Graham’s 15-shot group at seven yards

 

So when I had a chance to try a compact carry model you might understand my excitement.

Grand Power P11   XCalibur
Caliber 9 MM   9 MM
Action DA/SA   DA/SA
Capacity 12+1   15+1
Barrel Length 3.3″   5″
Front Sight Plastic   Fiber Optic
Rear Sight Drift Adjustable Steel   Micrometer Adjustable Steel
Finish Black   Black
Grips Polymer   Polymer
Construction Steel Slide, Steel Frame, Polymer Grip   Steel Slide, Steel Frame, Polymer Grip
Safety Frame-Mounted Thumb Safety/Decocker   Frame-Mounted Thumb Safety
Weight 22.6oz   28.1oz
Length 7″   8.7″
Height 4.6″   5.3″
Width 1.4″   1.4″
Grand Power P11 Tabletop View

Enter the Grand Power P11.  With the same precision, rotating barrel, and feel as the competition-oriented XCalibur, but in a more concealable size.   Typically, with carry guns the reduction in size also means a reduction in features.  With the P11 we lose the interchangeable back straps from the XCalibur, but gain a true double-action, single-action capability.

Condition 1 with the hammer back and safety on.

Condition 2 with the hammer safely lowered, safety off.

Condition 2.5? Leaving the decocker down keeps the gun in double-action only mode.

The ability to not only decock the firearm, but also leave it in double-action only helps the user train themselves with the heavier and longer pull of that first shot if you prefer to carry in condition 2.

A rotating barrel is uncommon in most handguns as they typically keep with the browning design.  At first glance one might think that Grand Power’s method is similar to Beretta’s, but in fact it is not and is their own patented design.  With a rotating barrel, there is no need for the barrel to shift vertically.  This permits the barrel to be lower and closer vertically to the hand.  As a result, there is less shift in weight during the cycling of the gun and what weight does shift transfers more through the shooter’s hand than over it.  To the shooter this equals less perceived recoil.  Without the clunking locking blocks of Browning’s design the pistol also cycles smoother which results in less muzzle flip.

Range Time with the Grand Power P11

                In the end the P11 provides most of the shooting enjoyment of the XCalibur with all of the precision machining and quality that we’ve come to expect from Grand Power.

About SOFREP News Team View All Posts

The SOFREP News Team is a collective of professional military journalists. Brandon Tyler Webb is the SOFREP News Team's Editor-in-Chief. Guy D. McCardle is the SOFREP News Team's Managing Editor. Brandon and Guy both manage the SOFREP News Team.

COMMENTS

You must become a subscriber or login to view or post comments on this article.

More from SOFREP

REAL EXPERTS.
REAL NEWS.

Join SOFREP for insider access and analysis.

TRY 14 DAYS FREE

Already a subscriber? Log In