Originally Posted by
Jammersix
A boutique gun is a gun manufactured by a company that doesn't have a standard milspec in their line. They're going for a particular market segment, that being that segment that wants to "buy" their training. You don't buy training. You train your training. The military loves to try to buy training, because they want to take untrained seventeen and eighteen year old children, and 16 weeks later claim that they're ready for combat. They love anything that helps them make that claim "truer" than it is. What I think they need is good hardware, and billions for training ammunition and man-years spent training, training and then more training. The compromise must be made, but over-engineered hardware is not the way to do it.
The hardware solutions are things like nightsights, bumps in beavertails, magwell funnels, or rails.
Minimalist is definitely the way to go with a defensive handgun-- to quote from another sport, "naked with the magic stone" is best, and everything the committee adds that gets away from that had better be well and truly justified. Best if it serves two purposes, like iron sights. If it only serves one, it better be the simplest, easiest, most elegant solution for that purpose possible.
Novaks eliminate an option. (That said, however, a military sidearm is the one place I can see nightsights being justified. Low light shooting is a training issue for civilians and police, far less so for the military.) What the military needs is a nightsight with an iron sight profile. Don't even talk about mag funnels.