shutupdata113
Member
in the winter/fall i carry a mp40c iwb but for spring/summer i carry a j-frame inside the pocket
Originally Posted by MOONDAWG
REVOLVERS
ADVANTAGES
7. Can be easily loaded and fired with only one hand in an emergency
I disagree with that one... the loading one handed part.
Much easier to load a revolver one handed... sure you can drop and pop the magazine in a semi-auto but then you have to rack the slide!! Try that one handed!!![]()
(I actually tested both, and racking the slide one handed is very difficult, at least it is with my 1911 .45)
Much easier to load a revolver one handed... sure you can drop and pop the magazine in a semi-auto but then you have to rack the slide!! Try that one handed!!![]()
(I actually tested both, and racking the slide one handed is very difficult, at least it is with my 1911 .45)
A. Unless there's an issue with it, or you bought a hunk of **** without a slide lock, it locks back when emptied.
B. Unless you have a full-length guiderod you can rack it against a hard surface.
If you have little experience in shooting pistols, I would recommend a revolver. For a home defense or carry, at least a 3 inch barrel will be a better gun for either application. There are a lot of variables in a semi to deal with such as malfunctions and if you do not constantly practice, you can find yourself dealing with the problem while your adrenalin is pumping. With a revolver, if the round does not fire, you just pull the trigger for the next round to fire. It is simple to use but practice every day. Dry fire it a least 15 minutes a day, with snap caps, in your garage creating different situations starting at 7 yards with targets in different areas. Also, I would purchase a used .22 handgun and practice your sight alignment and trigger practice. The ammo is cheap and you can transfer the same basics to other type of guns.
Nick
I use the James approach.
Some days I feel like James Cagney and I carry a model 60.
Other days I feel like James Bond and carry a Walther.![]()
Primary concealed carry: Model 13-3
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Alternate primary concealed carry: Model 10-5
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Secondary (read "always") concealed carry: Model 37
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Questions?
ECS
What kind of grips are those on your 13-3? I'd love something like that for my Cobra and Agent.
I stand in front of the gun locker and go eeny,meeny,miney,mo. I gotta quit starting in the same place 'cause I always end up with the same gun. Gets boring.![]()
Guys, just because your semi auto runs flawlessly at the range does not mean it will do the same in a self defense situation. At the range you are in a perfect situation, two hand grip on the gun, arms extended, feet apart, calm heart rate, no stress, exactly what is perfect for the gun to fire. This is not what is going to happen if you are in a self defense close encounter. Bad guys will not let you take the "proper position". Your more likely to shoot one handed, while falling to the ground or eating dirt and still trying to take your gun out or being punched and trying to place the barrel on the bad guys belly as you fend off with the other hand.... lets be reasonable here. Bad guys do not want to get shot and if they do not flee they will fight and there goes your "proper position". Law enforcement use semi's because they have the luxury of distance, bad guys want as much distance from cops as possible. You can fix a malfunction when you have distance. For us civilians, bad guys want to be in your face a malfunction means your dead. I choose a revolver because of this.
Lately I've been thinking of carrying my Keltec PMR 30! It's 30 rounds of 22 mag.Shoots like you wouldn't believe & hasn't jammed once!
Jim
My advise would be that revolver or semiauto does not matter. What matters more is that you train a lot with whichever you choose. A high stress situation is not the time to have to think about things