Most I've squeezed out of mine was 777 ft lbs of energy with 155gr XTP HP 1503 fps. No signs of pressure primers looked normal. Best of all no Glock smiles since it was fired in a fully supported 1911 barrel.Uh.... no. 10mm may be capable of some heat, but not 1000ftlbs of heat, geez.
In the end it's just a slightly more juicy service cartridge, that all sorts of mythical nonsense has been ascribed to. If you need to shoot heavy deep penetrating bullets into creatures in the woods, it's great.
It's not going to benefit you even 1% against something on 2 legs, but if it makes you feel better, have at it.
The 29 is probably the last thing I'd consider for EDC for 2 reasons. It's the large frame glock which has an obnoxiously wide slide that will be comically uncomfortably to conceal, and you're sacrificing enough barrel length that you're castrating the performance of the 10mm down to that of a 40 or below. So the entire purpose of going for that hot rodded cartridge is out of the window.
Typically 10mm pushes the same bullets 40S&W shoots about 100fps faster. Is that enough to matter? Maybe? But what are you shooting? More energy doesn't equal more better automatically. And buffalo bore, boutique ammo... Yeah, I hope that's what you use for practice because it's going to have a different POI because of the velocity difference. And it's not great for the frame of most guns, while giving you a tiny tiny amount of additional power.
Honestly, if you want to carry a 10mm, just get a 1911 in 10mm, it's going to be the easiest possible format to carry a 10mm. But in all honesty, if you're just after a hotrod you can manage to carry, get a S&W 329PD and call it a day, you'll be looking for lighter loadings rather than trying to hotrod a cartridge to its limit.
Glock Smile