For what it's worth (somewhere between a penny and a nickel)
I have been appendix carrying for over 5 years with 9mm and 45's.
For a little over 40 years I taught at a POST certified Academy. I beat into every recruit the 4 fundamentals of firearms safety. One of which is to never allow the muzzle sweep anything you are not willing to destroy and I would be on them like a cheap suit if I ever saw them use their support hand to "assist" them in reholstering. This usually resulted in them sweeping their S-Hand. Sticking a striker fired pistol into an appendix carry IWB holster, where it's pointing either at your "junk" or your femoral artery just seems wrong to me. I feel a little better about a revolver in that position, but it is still contrary to everything I see as a fundamental safety issue. As a firearms examiner for my agency I have examined only one pistol that had a true accidental discharge in the holster. It was due to a part failure and fortunately no one was injured. That was enough for me. I realize all you guys are adults and are capable of making sound decisions, but keep in mind that mechanical devices do fail.
Taj....Thanks for the input. I really do appreciate your comments. For that penny to a nickel again I personally have never seen any revolver or striker fired weapon fire itself while sitting in a holster without being touched, especially with the safety on. I'm not saying it will never happen but I just have never heard of it.
I carry with the safety on and have spent years practicing removing the safety on extraction and I have absolutely no problem with that form of carry. Unless I am at a range my weapon never leaves the holster except for cleaning so my mind is ok with this striker fired weapon pointing at my junk...(ps..my junk is 72 years old now and can truly be considered junk)..



could be putting it out of it's misery is the humane thing to do....

