This is the Best .380 Pistol Ever Made

**NOTE**: According to an email I received from Beretta, cocked-and-locked carry (hammer cocked with safety engaged) is not an intermediate position but, rather, is a transitional step where the safety lever stiffens against the decocking lever. While, at that point, the trigger bar should be disconnected - it’s not guaranteed. Thus, if you carry cocked-and-locked, you do so at your own risk. In this episode of TFBTV, @JamesReeves believes he has found the best .380 ACP pistol ever made, and he thinks it might be the new Beretta 80X Cheetah. The 80X is basically the Beretta 80-series reborn. A compact .380 doublestack pistol, but with new features like night sights, optic readiness, more aggressive slide serrations, and a pic rail, among other features. James tells you why the Beretta 80X is the best .380ACP pistol on the market today. • Best .380 Defensive Ammo: Federal HST 99gr .380ACP • Recommended Optic: Holosun 407k ⇒ SUPPORT US AND WIN FREE GEAR EVERY MONTH ⇐ TFBTV is viewer supported. We need you. We give away $1,900 in gift certificates to Top Gun Supply and Blue Alpha EVERY SINGLE MONTH to our supporters. You are automatically entered to win as a supporter of TFBTV. How to enter/full official rules are found at YouTube is not a sponsor of this contest. ««« APPAREL IN THIS VIDEO »»» • Apparel: All TFBTV apparel is sponsored by Tactical and you can get it at ««« FOLLOW US ON SOCIAL MEDIA »»» ««« TFB CHAT ROOM »»» Want to join the TFBTV chat room? Use our Discord Invite: #tfbtv Contents: 0:00 Introduction 5:00 The Beretta 80X 9:15 80X Reliability and Accuracy 11:40 Should You Carry .380? 14:17 Cons 15:08 Summary & Conclusion Correction: 5:50 Beretta does NOT recommend cocked and locked carry for this gun. Cocked-and-locked (hammer cocked with safety engaged) is not an intermediate position but, rather, is a transitional step where the safety lever stiffens against the decocking lever. While, at that point, the trigger bar should be disconnected - it’s not guaranteed. If you carry cocked and locked, you do so at your own risk.
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