Glocks are *usually* black in color and have a very "boxy" appearance. They have no visible hammer or safety. Their sights are usually raised box sights. They can have barrels ranging from 3" to 5" and grips ranging from two finger grips (trigger plus two fingers) to full grips. Stock Glocks will have either no finger grooves or only one small finger grooves. Glocks are always handguns unless they have been modified by the user.
Beretta makes handguns, shotguns, and rifles. Berettas can look like almost anything.
Each performs as designed.
A Glock 17 is lighter than a Beretta M9. Glock 17: 625g Beretta M9: 952g Note: The weights stated here are for the UNLOADED weapon. Loaded weapons are significantly heavier.
Both Glock 17 9 mm and beretta 92 fs witch are butter because of their high durability.
M-92 beretta,glock 17, glock 19, 38 special, hk 9mm, and walther p99
Colt, Smith and Wesson, FN, Glock, Webley, Beretta and many others.
Either the Beretta M9 or the Desert Eagle. Most likely the M9. It depends on what you mean. If you mean America's military, the primary handgun is the Beretta M9, but if you mean in general, the Glock is the most common. About 65% of police departments in the U.S. use Glock, and probably about that same amount in competitive practical shooting.
Lasermax sells laser sighting systems for guns. Their products fit guns from makers like Glock, Sig Sauer, Beretta, Springfield, Smith & Wesson, and many others.
Call Glock or go to Glocktalk.com
The last I heard, it was Glock pistols in 9 MM. I think it is a Glock 19.
"Better" is a relative term. It's all in what your exact application for it is. The Kimber is more easily concealable than the other two (except for the Glock 26), and uses a striker fired action similar to the Glock. However, if you have particularly large hands, the Kimber may be less-than-ideal vs. a mid or full sized Glock or the Beretta. My main concern with the Kimber and Glock, particularly for concealed carry, is the lack of safety features, with the trigger lock being the only safety feature. Which is why I personally prefer the Springfield XD series. The Beretta.. depends on what model you get. If you get the actual M9, you get fixed sights (same as with the Kimber or Glock). If you want adjustable sights, they're available with other variants of the Beretta 92. On the downside concerning the Beretta, the safety is a bit awkward, and the hammer drop/block feature doesn't allow you to carry it "cocked and locked", the way you could with the earlier models of the Beretta 92, which had the frame mounted safety (this feature is still found on the Taurus PT92 and PT99 models, which are manufactured under licence from Beretta). Ultimately, what it comes to is that the best one is what's best for you. Read some reviews, rent some at a range which does handgun rentals, and make your decision based on that. Be wary of gun shops and what they recommend - they'll often try to push you towards what they're a sponsored dealer of.
Every agency tends to favor a certain sidearm, but some common ones are Glock, Heckler & Koch, Sig Sauer, Smith & Wesson, Colt, Beretta. They are usually chambered in one of the following calibers: .38 Spl, .357 Mag, .357 Sig, 9mm, .40 S&W, 10mm, .45 ACP.
The Beretta M9 replaced the M1911 as the standard service pistol of the US Military. However, Glocks were used by Air Force pilots, although they're supposed to have since been phased out for the FN 5.7.