Carrying W/Empty Chamber

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Oh, and with respect to all who feel empty chamber is nuts: Consider that it is probably MORE likely that one will have an accidental discharge or drop their weapon before they will actually use a gun in self defense in their lifetime. There are thousands of us carrying up to 365 days a year. How many in this forum have used the gun in self defense, as opposed to dropping the weapon unexpectedly, or having an AD? I had a friend that was "perfect" for a long time...he could NEVER understand how an accidental discharge could occur. He'd been trained by Gunsite no less than three times. Then he had an AD. Very humbling experience. In every armed confrontation (so far), I have had time to chamber a round if necessary. I have also been "disarmed" by a state who only recently (four years ago) got a concealed carry law into existence. Having a loaded but empty chamber gun at hand, and a plan to put into action, is infinitely better than NO GUN, or a gun back at the house or in the car. Do I EVER carry condition one? Oh yes! But sometimes I don't, for extra safety sake.
 
I have to agree with most others that do not subscribe to the empty chamber theory. Yes I witnessed a very impressive demonstration by Israeli shooters at the Bianchi Cup years ago. they are smooth and fast....But I takes two hands. A double action auto is no more or less than a fully loaded revolver. Single action, and squeeze cockers must be used and practiced with it is that simple. Don't stack the deck against yourself. The movies like the racking of the slide for effect, but it is like most things in movies (fantasy) Years ago most East coast and Mid West departments wore some kind of suicide holsters. thank God for California cops, the Border Patrol and Bill Jordan. In the 60s Cincinnati wore cross draw, St. Louis wore flap cross draws and Mo. Troopers wore a swivel and strap. None of those were worth a damn in an adrenalin packed situation. The cross draws were taboo even in PPC matches yet it took years to put the officers life in front of supposedly idiot proof holsters. No cartridge in the chamber is the same wrong thinking. Even the three stage security holsters have caused officers lives. You must practice so that muscle memory takes over in high stress situations....I'm not an expert but I'm still here after 40 years on the job.
 
Originally posted by TwoGunsStanding:
See? That's why I started this discussion. Cocked and locked is NOT for everybody. That is why some carry DA autos and revolvers. Some guns (with FP safeties like the Series 80 Colts, later Kimbers, etc,) have a margin of safety if OFF safe and dropped. Let's take an older Colt 1908 .380, or Browning Hi Power. I have carried both cocked and locked, and on several occasions, the safety has been "wiped" to the off position, becasue both have safeties that don't "click" into place. I have even found some 1911A1's with safety off due to holsters, getting bumped, etc. Sure, the grip safety is a margin of safety if dropped, but a tuned 1911 type gun witn no other safeties on can go off if dropped the wrong way. There are other guns, many of which are as worthy to carry as a Model 36 S&W snub. I carried a DA magnum revolver for many years as a cop, and a 1911 pattern gun off duty for an equal amount of time. After evaluating all the dangerous aand potentially dangerous situations I was in, including the disarming of bad guys on two different occasion on my own, I have come to have a "feel" for iminent threats and danger, and shy of a "without warning, in-your-face" gun that I possibly won't see coming, I don't feel like I am THAT far behind to snag my gun and rack the slide. Once again, I know this is a trade off, and I am at risk in that statistically rare incident. If it makes one feel wasrm and fuzzy, and all that much more the master of their environment to be "cocked and locked, beat-you-to-the-draw ready", then so be it. I had a gun work it's way out of a holster once, too, in an examination room in a hospital. Didn't go off, but having a chamber loaded, tricked up auto hit a tile floor might still make me choke a bit until I recover from the fright and embarrasment. Ever hear of the guy who hung his Glock on the hook in the toilet stall, only to have it bump the trigger as he was hanging it, and have it go off several times recoiling against the hook and trigger, perpendicular from where he was standing? I have made a habit of putting my gun down in my pants between my legs where I know where it is and can easily draw it if needed. One of the officer's I worked with left his pistol BEHIND the toilet once (that's where he had gotten used to putting it when using the john), and FORGOT it there. That is REALLY embarassing. As we have seen from the responses, just about anything goes, as long as the user knows WHAT his plan is. Some might err on the side of safety, and some go with speed of presentation. It's always a compromise.

One, if you've already made up your mind, why in the world did you ask the question?

Suggesting that dropping a modern gun will make it go off is silly. If it will go off by dropping it, it shouldn't be carried...period. I have a racegun with a 2lb trigger and you can drop it from ten feet and it's not going to go off. Springfield Armory guns passed the California drop test with NO firing pin safety of any kind...just the right combo of a light firing pin and a normal firing pin safety.

Just because you've been LUCKY so far and would have had the time to rack the slide doesn't mean that next time you'll be just as lucky.

If you carry condition one sometimes then you're already contradicting yourself. Nobody knows when things will go bad and when they won't so they can err on the side of safety...heck, if you're going to do that, leave the gun at home and be really, really safe.

Year of experience, years of luck and personal beliefs don't mean diddly when it comes to what bad guys can and will do. If you think it's reasonable enough that you might need a gun to the point that you carry one, it should be ready to use NOW. Not after loading it, not after doing a forward roll.....NOW...hand on gun, get it out and send lead downrange.

Go take some time and read the newly released summary of officers killed. It's a painful read, but time after time it's someone within arm length pulling a gun out and shooting the officer. If you're not a cop, you're even more likely to be surprised because you're the intended target/victim and not going out of your way to make contact with the bad guy.

I don't have a dog in the fight, but I know that your ideas and justifications are absolutely wrong and the idea that someone might read this and believe it bothers me. You've already decided what you want to do, and that's fine....I hope you continue to be lucky, but you're clearly in the extreme minority here (and everywhere else in my experience)...I don't think it's responsible to suggest that others should follow that example.

The idea that anybody would suggest adding ANY additional task, much less requiring dexterity and the use of both hands, that would need to be completed before you can attempt to defend yourself is so mind-numbingly foolish as to be almost criminal. I don't mean that to offend, but it is what it is.

For anyone reading this, ask yourself this one question and see if it passes the idiot test:

Do you want to leave yourself ANY chance that you might be wrestling with a monster while thinking "if my gun had a round in the chamber, I could shoot him, but it's not, he's bigger and stronger than I am, pumped up on meth/coke/etc and I might never see my family again"?

If the answer is that you would never want to be thinking that....get a safe, modern gun and carry it with a round in the chamber, or get a revolver.
 
G-manBart,

You obviously believe that your way is the right way, and that's fine and good. But I think your emotional tirade missed the point some of us were making.

Carrying condition 1 is not a free lunch - there is a price to be paid for speed. The price is higher chance of self inflicted injury. It's high enough to become a primary cause of gunshot wounds for cops. That's what worries some of us. If you want to imply that we are idiots or criminals - be my guest.

Mike
 
Originally posted by Hoptob:
Carrying condition 1 is not a free lunch - there is a price to be paid for speed. The price is higher chance of self inflicted injury. It's high enough to become a primary cause of gunshot wounds for cops. That's what worries some of us. If you want to imply that we are idiots or criminals - be my guest.

Mike

A price to be paid for speed? Modern pistols are designed to be carried loaded and NEGLIGENT discharges (accidental is the wrong term) are the fault of the handler, not the gun. If you carry a gun because you feel you may need to defend yourself with it then there is no argument, you carry the thing fully loaded and ready to go. If you believe that you'll be able to draw, load, and accurately fire the weapon while fighting with someone or being shot at then you're fooling yourself. The assumption that everything, no, let me rephrase that - the assumption that ANYTHING is going to go your way if you ever have to use your gun is foolishness.

Picture two shooters of equal ability side by side at the range, guns holstered. On the whistle they draw and fire 3rds. Who is going to be faster and more accurate? The guy who's gun is charged and ready, every time. When the bullets are flying that second or two or three could be what makes the difference between living and dying.

If you're weapon is in good repair and functioning properly, you have trained with it and are competent in it's use, are carrying it in an appropriate, good quality holster, and STILL don't trust yourself or the weapon enough to carry it the way it was designed then you have no business carrying it at all.
 
Wrong scenario, WC. I don't usually carry auto's but do practice Israeli draw. In your scenario there will be no difference in time - you rack the slide while drawing and it does not take extra time.

Problem with carrying cond 3 is that you need both hands to rack the slide - and you may not have'em. That's where the odds are. You have to weight these odds against odds of ND and make your own decision. You believe cond 1 is right for you - great, it's your choice. My choice is to carry revolver.

And BTW, my friend, nobody is foolish here. We are all responsible adults making our own decisions.

Mike
 
quote:
Originally posted by Hoptob:
Carrying condition 1 is not a free lunch - there is a price to be paid for speed. The price is higher chance of self inflicted injury. It's high enough to become a primary cause of gunshot wounds for cops. That's what worries some of us. If you want to imply that we are idiots or criminals - be my guest.

Mike


A price to be paid for speed? Modern pistols are designed to be carried loaded and NEGLIGENT discharges (accidental is the wrong term) are the fault of the handler, not the gun. If you carry a gun because you feel you may need to defend yourself with it then there is no argument, you carry the thing fully loaded and ready to go. If you believe that you'll be able to draw, load, and accurately fire the weapon while fighting with someone or being shot at then you're fooling yourself. The assumption that everything, no, let me rephrase that - the assumption that ANYTHING is going to go your way if you ever have to use your gun is foolishness.

Picture two shooters of equal ability side by side at the range, guns holstered. On the whistle they draw and fire 3rds. Who is going to be faster and more accurate? The guy who's gun is charged and ready, every time. When the bullets are flying that second or two or three could be what makes the difference between living and dying.

If you're weapon is in good repair and functioning properly, you have trained with it and are competent in it's use, are carrying it in an appropriate, good quality holster, and STILL don't trust yourself or the weapon enough to carry it the way it was designed then you have no business carrying it at all.
Posts: 41 | Location: Maine |
Picture two shooters of equal ability side by side at the range, guns holstered. On the whistle they draw and fire 3rds. Who is going to be faster and more accurate? The guy who's gun is charged and ready, every time. When the bullets are flying that second or two or three could be what makes the difference between living and dying.
Here is a perfect example of theory at work. Everyone with an opinion here is talking about hypotheticals. At point blank, the guy with the chamber full might get the first shot off...or he might hesitate for some reason. I have watched some people NOT get their safeties off (some agencies even require a DA auto to also be on safe, and I believe Mas Ayoob has also given some reasons for that practice). I have seen officers struggle with retention holsters, bad guys get hammers snagged on clothing, etc. Two equal men side by side is some kind of dream thing. In the real world it is a crap shoot. Good cover is better than standing in the open quick drawing (see NYPD's take on officer survival). Why did I ask the question? Because I love to hear other people's take on things, and it makes me think. I think it might make everyone else think, too, unless, of course, minds are closed or one believes that THEIR way is the only way. Just look at the responses here, and you'll see there IS more than one way, for more than one reason. For twenty plus years in law enforcement, I had to have the best equipment, trained hard, and wanted to be the fastest and best on my department. I trained to respond and place the bullet first if possible. Slowly, it became apparent to me that the multitude of factors that govern a gunfight make it impossible to insure a positive result everytime...thus the "crap shoot". You enter any building, or round any corner, even knowing the bad guys are nearby, and you are still at the mercy of who sees who first. The few micro seconds of presentation are lost among all the other response. OF course, if gunplay was iminently likely, you got your gun out and ready ahead of time...chambers of shotguns for instance are usually charged after drawing the weapon from the vehicle, etc. I just started to regard the handgun the same way, when that particular weapon seemed to deem it (a DA revolver NEVER needs an empty chamber.) I DO carry Browning HP condition one in a shoulder holster on occasion...a fine weapon..but I have found the safety off on occasion, too, and going back to empty chamber doesn't handicap me enough to make me overly worried. I just know what I'm going to do when I draw.
 
Originally posted by Hoptob:
G-manBart,

You obviously believe that your way is the right way, and that's fine and good. But I think your emotional tirade missed the point some of us were making.

Carrying condition 1 is not a free lunch - there is a price to be paid for speed. The price is higher chance of self inflicted injury. It's high enough to become a primary cause of gunshot wounds for cops. That's what worries some of us. If you want to imply that we are idiots or criminals - be my guest.

Mike

Mike,

First things first, that wasn't an "emotional tirade", it was a well-reasoned response to someone, that quite painfully, doesn't seem to know what they're talking about because their very statements contradict themselves. If that isn't exactly the case then it seems that they are making an emotion decision based on flawed logic. Neither scenario is really all that helpful for folks who might read this and I'll note he didn't reply to my questions to him, so that tells me something.

Second, the threadstarted posed a question to which, it now seems clear, he had already formed a definite opinion. So, was he asking the question to stir up a controversy or was he doing it to "convert" others? He certainly isn't going to change how he carries and he certainly wasn't asking for advice...although he posed it that way at first. Not exactly a fair, honest and unbiased representation any way you look at it. What good is asking a question you already have decided upon....just so you can read what others say and still disagree?

Third, where have you seen any documented, reliable data that the primary cause of gunshot wounds to cops are self-inflicted? Also, if you've seen that, are they fatal injuries or not? Suicide can be lumped in to accidental/negligent discharge statistics to skew the number since law enforcement has always had a pretty high suicide rate. Still, over the years I've looked and haven't found self-inflicted wounds to officers documented anywhere. The CDC seems to lump all gunshot wounds together and doesn't break out law enforcement specifically.

I have been in law enforcement for only 15 years, which isn't terribly long, but in that time I don't know a single person who's injured themselves with a gun. In fact, I don't know anybody who has a friend or former coworker that's had that happen. Now, maybe I've worked with all the best gun handlers around, but I pretty much doubt that. Sure, it has happened and will continue to do so, but it's not at a rate that should alarm anyone other than to increase the focus on training and preventing repeat mistakes that can be avoided.

I work in an agency with approximately 12,000 gun toters (was in two others prior to this). In the past year we've had zero self-inflicted wounds and two fatal wounds during an adversarial situation. I'm a firearms instructor, and I get notices about all the shootings both accidental and otherwise. I'm going off memory and think that the last self-inflicted wound we had was over a year ago, but it's possible that it was slightly less....not being in the office, I can't access the notice on it to check. In that situation, the drawstring of a jacket cought the trigger and caused a true AD (different from a negligent discharge)....put a slight crease on the agents butt, and a lesson learned for everyone about their clothing choices. That's bad, but even if there's one in a year out of 12K, that's not exactly what I'd call "dangerous". A lot more folks are going to be seriously injured in car accidents every year than that....we work to prevent them, but they're still going to happen.

Rather than discuss theories, look at REAL numbers. In 2007, there were 83 law enforcement officers killed accidentally. Of those 83, only four were killed by firearms. All four of those were situations involving a cross-fire or mistaken identity (thought to be the bad guy). Not a single one was self-inflicted. You can read it for yourself here:
http://www.fbi.gov/ucr/killed/2007/accidentallykilled.html

The average cop gets a couple of days of range time and maybe 300-500 rounds worth of training at their academy. After that there is almost no training, only qualifying, which is nothing more than legal documentation. They then qualify from one to four times a year, but even four times, is a lot more than most places....once or twice a year is the most common I've seen. Almost anybody can train themselves to a MUCH higher standard than the typical cop....keep in mind I wear a badge and I'm gladly admitting this. Cops, as shooters, generally stink. Ask the few that you see at the range what they think about their fellow officer's gun skills and if they're not too embarrased, they'll tell you that for the most part they're terrible...sad, but true.

Go out once per month and shoot two hundred rounds with some sort of discipline/plan in mind and you're WAY ahead of probably 98% of the cops out there when it comes to proficiency. Using police training and proficiency as a model is a bad starting point...plain and simple.

Since this thread is about the Israeli carry method, you have to understand a little bit about it, to know whether it applies to you and the way you live, work, carry etc.

There aren't a ton of ranges in Israel, they have precious little time and money to spend on firearms training and they have some very unique living conditions. They found that giving largely untrained people loaded firearms caused problems. They also found that because of the unique conditions there, many of the armed folks didn't necessarily have to carry with a round chambered. They don't have many/any car-jackings, armed muggings, stick ups at 7-Elevens etc....those are true reactive scenarios. What they do have are checkpoints where terrorists/suicide bombers will try to get through. Bad guy comes through one side of the checkpoint, things don't seem right, they draw, rack the slide and order them to stop while safely behind barriers in case the bad guys blow themselves up. That is NOT what most people live like. The normal cops there train more like our cops do and many of them are authorized to carry with a round in the chamber.

The Israeli's also found that since they were dealing with quickly trained people on a budget, the empty chamber, draw, rack, fire training also reinforced and dovetailed with emergency action drills. If you press the trigger and the gun doesn't go bang, you smack the mag, rack the slide and evaluate whether you need to shoot. Half of that action is identical to what you do when you draw to engage, so the two compliment each other and save training time.

Put all that together and it's a pretty unique set of circumstances and it led to some pretty unique solutions, but they don't necessarily apply here.

In your reply to WC you said that with the scenario of two people side-by-side, one with a loaded gun and the other with an empty chamber, the speed for three hits would be the same.

If that's true, then the person with the fully loaded weapon doesn't know what they're doing and need additional training. In the matches I shoot, we are often forced to do this exact scenario (well, without the other person). I know my times to draw and hit a target at various ranged down to the tenths of seconds required. I also know how long it takes to draw, rack the slide and shoot and it's not even remotely close. Pick a 10yd target, which is less of a disadvantage than something closer. I can reliably react, draw and put a solid hit on that target in 1.0s all day long and faster when I'm really on (like .8s). If I have to rack the slide, I'm going to be right about 2.0S if I get it perfect. If I fumble it, even slightly, it's way slower. In fact, I can draw and put six rounds (center hits) into a target at 10yds in 2.0s reliably. So, I've hit the bad guy six times before the slide racking guy of equal skill gets off his first shot....no contest, end of story, the timer doesn't lie. Not everyone will have the same numbers, but nobody is going to be as fast, or faster when racking the slide.

At close ranges like 1-3yds, the difference is going to be even bigger since I can fire almost immediately after the gun clears leather and not have to bring the gun all the way up, rack the slide and then shoot....anybody can test this and see for themselves, but the results are going to be the same for everyone.

The thing that none of the few folks advocating carrying an empty chamber will address is probably the most important. If they feel the need to carry a gun for the unlikely event that they'll need it, why won't they carry it with a round in the chamber for the more likely chance that they won't have two hands free if the unlikely event does happen? Like I said before, only one of the guys I know who's been forced to shoot someone would have had time to rack the slide, or had both hands free to do so. The three times I had to reactively draw on someone I would not have had time to rack the slide. Luckily I didn't ever have to shoot, but at least I would have been able to do so if needed.

It's like the folks that say "I only carry when I think I'm going to need it". Well, if you REALLY thought you were going to need it, you'd carry a long gun, a spare gun, bring friends with guns or go somewhere else and avoid needing a gun in the first place. It's absolutely illogical when you boil it down to facts and reality rather than whimsical assumptions.

Again, everyone needs to ask themselves how they'd like to be wrestling with a monster thinking how nice it would be to have a round in the chamber of the now useless gun they went out of their way to buy, learn to shoot and carry.

If someone feels they want/need to carry a gun to defend themselves then they need to learn to do it the right way and not kid themselves that they're "safer" by carrying with an empty chamber...there isn't a free lunch to get around that. In fact, it goes opposite of cardinal rule #1....treat all firearms as if they are loaded. If you do that, it doesn't matter if it's got a round in the chamber, does it? R,
 
^^^That pretty well sums it up.

I am an LEO, I'm a one man department in a little rural town. Around here cops are few and far between. Of course, we don't have much violent crime around here either. However, simply because this area is not a hot bed of criminal activity doesn't mean that the next person I talk to won't be the one that just killed his wife, or is meeting another POS for a drug deal, or is on the run from somewhere else and refuses to go back, or is just plain f**ked up and wants to shoot somebody today. Now, considering those realities, however slim the chances may be, would it make sense for me to walk out of the house this morning without my duty weapon fully charged and without the mind set that no matter what happens today I'm coming home at the end of it? Obviously not, because that level of preparedness is simply common sense for any cop, BUT IT IS ALSO COMMON SENSE FOR EVERYBODY ELSE. Any one of you might run into those same people today and you need to be as ready as you can be for that possibility. To carry a gun that is not ready to fire is simply giving an unnecessary advantage to an enemy who is certainly NOT going to give you any breaks in return. I don't know what else there is to say.
 
I challenge all to comment about the loss of speed from carrying "Condition One" (cocked & locked), and starting with an empty chamber and cocking the slide "on the way up".

And what if one of your arms has already been taken out of the fight by injury or being held by the accomplice?

I like my DAO semi-autos. They're safe to carry with a round in the chamber, have that long trigger pull, no safeties to fumble wtih, the ammunition capacity beats revolvers, and they have a slim concealment profile.
 
BarbC:
I think I read a post by you yhat stated you had a Walther PPS? I purchased one recently and have had only good operation with it. For a small pistol it shoots real well at 15 yards. Even though I am a steel and wood guy I do like the PPS. I have been reading that some have had problem with slide over riding the return spring. I'm not sure exactly what that means. How has your experience been. So far I have been impressed. for a weapon of that size to be as user friendly is a joy especially when carrying it....Just curious...George
 
I love that PPS and haven't experienced any problems with it. It's easy to carry, use and clean, and shoots quickly and accurately enough for defensive purposes. I like my carry weapons to be easy and instinctive to shoot.

PPS031408.jpg
 
I challenge all to comment about the loss of speed from carrying "Condition One" (cocked & locked), and starting with an empty chamber and cocking the slide "on the way up".

I challenge anyone who thinks that cycling the slide doesn't cost them time to get a PACT timer, and post video of themselves, or better yet, an objective third party, shooting both ways for time.
 
Now this is really going to challenge some people, but I just timed myself racking the slide and firing my .45 1911A1, and I got off a shot before most cops would have decided if they are going to shoot (and bear in mind, I'm a former LEO, so I'm allowed to poke fun). In all seriousness now, aren't we going to have to spend just a split second to size up the situation? I plan to use that time to rack the slide, if the gun I'm carrying at the moment has an empty chamber. I will also admit, as it hasn't been brought up yet, but I do use more than one gun for CCW, and really SHOULD just stick to one gun, practice, practice, practice, and carry it in the lightning ready mode (which excludes those "iffy" guns that might be safer with empty chamber, SA revolvers included). As they say, beware of the man with just one gun. But there are a lot of us in this group that own more than one gun, and love them all, and enjoy wringing them all out. That might someday be my downfall, but I did want to see where the "pulse" was with all of the rest of you gun toters out there. It has been educational, and I might get back to placing more emphasis on that "one true & ready" CCW gun.
 
Originally posted by TwoGunsStanding:
Now this is really going to challenge some people, but I just timed myself racking the slide and firing my .45 1911A1, and I got off a shot before most cops would have decided if they are going to shoot (and bear in mind, I'm a former LEO, so I'm allowed to poke fun). In all seriousness now, aren't we going to have to spend just a split second to size up the situation? I plan to use that time to rack the slide, if the gun I'm carrying at the moment has an empty chamber.

Which method of doing that with one hand do you use?
 
Originally posted by TwoGunsStanding:
Now this is really going to challenge some people, but I just timed myself racking the slide and firing my .45 1911A1, and I got off a shot before most cops would have decided if they are going to shoot (and bear in mind, I'm a former LEO, so I'm allowed to poke fun). In all seriousness now, aren't we going to have to spend just a split second to size up the situation? I plan to use that time to rack the slide, if the gun I'm carrying at the moment has an empty chamber. I will also admit, as it hasn't been brought up yet, but I do use more than one gun for CCW, and really SHOULD just stick to one gun, practice, practice, practice, and carry it in the lightning ready mode (which excludes those "iffy" guns that might be safer with empty chamber, SA revolvers included). As they say, beware of the man with just one gun. But there are a lot of us in this group that own more than one gun, and love them all, and enjoy wringing them all out. That might someday be my downfall, but I did want to see where the "pulse" was with all of the rest of you gun toters out there. It has been educational, and I might get back to placing more emphasis on that "one true & ready" CCW gun.

Okay, the actual "challenge" is to tell us what the actual times were.

I just timed myself and, as I said earlier, my consistent first shot from a concealment style holster is 1.0s. Racking the slide pushed that time to 1.7s. These were consistent averages. I wasn't scared, didn't have a bad guy rushing me and it was nearly twice as long. Under stress I'd suspect that second time to go up. If I get some time later I'll try to video is and post it on my youtube account...user name is the same as here.

A civilian carrying CCW, isn't supposed to draw the weapon unless things are already at a point where they're going to shoot. Displaying the weapon just because they think something is going bad, isn't enough to draw according to most state's laws. So, no, it's not very likely that you'll take time to analyze the situation while you're getting the gun out and loaded.

Also, it doesn't take a "split second" to rack the slide, it takes nearly twice as long.

Even if there are some situations where you would have time to rack/analyze, there are just as many times when you will have no rack/analyze.

As people keep asking you, and you keep avoiding, how are your times racking the slide when you only have one hand free? Do you prefer the belt method, heel of your shoe, etc? Not that anybody expects a reply at this point...
 
That’s one well reasoned, well thought through opinion. Thanks for taking time to write it up, G-manBart.

On your question about the source. Like I said above – “read about it somewhere”. An article of some sort but I can’t remember where or find it now. No reason to consider it a well documented reliable source. Pity that gunshot wounds in the line of duty are not reported separately along with fatalities.

As far as being ahead of some local cops in training dept. – unfortunately, you are correct about it. I see them from time to time at my range… Hope they are doing something about it.

Your draw times are impressive. The reason I don’t see much difference between standard and Israeli draw is that I am slower on standard draw than you are. From an open plastic OWB I am at 1.5-2.0 s both ways. That’s if I use 2 hands for racking. If I have to do it one handed it’s much slower and not reliable for me.

Keep in mind though that there is a substantial difference between LEO and armed civilian. On the job LEO’s carry open or in barely concealed holsters. Civilians have to conceal much deeper and it takes away from their draw time. From a real life IWB concealed under one or more layers of clothing, my timing is 2-3 s and even with a revolver I often need weak hand to lift the clothes…

There was an interesting article on the subject, check it out - http://pistol-training.com/archives/183

Mike
 
I will also admit, as it hasn't been brought up yet, but I do use more than one gun for CCW, and really SHOULD just stick to one gun, practice, practice, practice, and carry it in the lightning ready mode (which excludes those "iffy" guns that might be safer with empty chamber, SA revolvers included). As they say, beware of the man with just one gun. But there are a lot of us in this group that own more than one gun, and love them all, and enjoy wringing them all out. That might someday be my downfall, but I did want to see where the "pulse" was with all of the rest of you gun toters out there. It has been educational, and I might get back to placing more emphasis on that "one true & ready" CCW gun.

I also have several guns that I carry between on and off duty and BUGs but they are all DAO, no safeties or decockers and all have similar trigger pulls. No matter which one I'm carrying at any given time the drill is the same - draw and fire - quick, easy, simple. Just the way I like it.

BTW, you should be sizing up the situation before drawing your weapon and if the situation deems an armed response THEN you draw and SHOULD be prepared to fire, NOT messing around trying to load your gun.
 
G-Man Bart, I'm starting to get the impression that you just don't believe anyone should carry a gun chamber empty. Per my ealier post, I intimated that we all should be sizing up the situation, all the time, and that even when a cop is face to face with a problem child, MOST of the good guys are going to be wary, AND hesitant, given the problems with shooting people on the job in general. There is a measure of time that that takes. Perhaps you would just draw and fire in all instances. Let me ask you, how many gunfights have you been in where the difference in getting off your shot, and adding the time that it takes you to chamber a round and start the shooting would have cost you your life or being injured? Anything other than "I've had a hands on experience like that" is conjecture. Don't get me wrong, I love conjecture. It IS food for thought, BUT it is not definitive. Private citizens are no less legally bound than cops, and while you may not endorse producing a weapon until it's all of a dire straights, shoot-em-now situation, if I have time, I'm going to do ALL kinds of things that better my chances, to include getting the gun in my hand, looking quickly for bad guys two, three, and four(he, BG #1 may not be alone), chambering, taking off the safety (should it be cocked and locked), taking cover, barking serious orders to the bad guy(s), etc. I'm awfully glad I have NOT had to shoot anyone yet, I have been in condition zero with a few people, and wrestled the gun away from another before I could even THINK about drawing. I have to guess that if I am one or two steps away from the bad guy again, I might just instinctively step into and grapple again. I didn't plan that one, it just happened. Just like knife fighting, if you are very close, you can do a lot of things that don't necessarily result in gun shots. Smacking a bad guy in the face with the slide of my unchambered pistol might be the best plan at three feet, much like the speedy damage that a knife might do at arms reach. Like I said, you're pretty adamant about your position. Still, to worry about the difference of "draw-bang" vs. "draw-rack-bang" seems pretty trivial to me in the big scheme of things. I DO practice being able to rack the slide back on my belt, palm, or nearby objects (or one handed -Brownings and Colt 1911's will do that, CZ-75's won't, for instance), should I become one handed. And I do practice shooting with both hands, almost to the point of being totally ambidextrous. Everybody's worst fear is the "no warning, didn't-see-it-coming-he's-pulling-his-gun-and-he-is-going-to-shoot-ME-NOW" scenario. But, 95-98% of the time, that is just not the way it is, and I'm being generous with the other percentage. Condition white, condition yellow. Big difference (thank you, Mr Cooper). Obviously you are going to feel seriously handicapped to have an empty chamber on any gun, ever, but that might just be a wee bit of parnoia rather than being "all ready" at all times. If you've got lightning reflexes, and do all the other awareness and street survival tactics, then I bow to you...you will probably beat me to the draw AND clean my clock thrice over before I rack my slide. Or, it might just be MY day for dumb luck.
 
I patrol in a dreadful city and I do a lot of competitive shooting. I have never dropped a loaded firearm or had a negligent discharge (or even a match DQ). But I have had to shoot twice on the street.

The first incident involved a deranged individual with a bloody knife. Actually it was his own blood. After the shooting we were told that his blood was polluted with numerous terrible diseases. I realized right then that there is no such thing as sacrificing "just an arm" or whatever "minor" body part to a blade. If that blade is bloody and the blood happens to be tainted, then YOU will be diseased if you get cut.

The second time the pit bull got me and I was bleeding, and I feel I would not have had time to rack the slide, as that 0.7 second extra would've allowed the running dog to get between me and other officers, putting us in a crossfire. And I really needed to shoot that dog to find out if it had rabies or not.

I carry an auto on duty only because I am forced to do so. Otherwise, I always choose to carry a revolver. Occasionally I do carry a concealed auto, and I would NEVER carry one with an empty chamber.

Dave Sinko
 
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