Carrying with safety off

At my range there are a lot of people that doesn't have saftys on their hand guns
There is also a lot that have them as well
Most of experienced folks are more comfortable carrying safty off or none at all
So I suppose its up to the individual
I carry my edc cocked and safty off because I prefer that
Maybe a newbie thinking of buying a handgun might tend to think a safty is a bad choice and could up
buying one without a safty and be injured or worse be killed or kill someone else due to all the negative
comments about saftys
Just my thoughts and I mean no offense to anyone preferring no safty
 
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Thanks everyone. I just wanted to make sure that there was not any additional internal safe-guards on the model without a safety that are not on the one with a safety. I don't want to have to worry about taking the time to flip the safety off in what would already be a tremendously stressful situation.
Good question to start the thread off. My training was a Gunsite Academy, when Jeff Cooper was one of the instructors. They taught use of the 1911 Government pistol, cocked and locked. With training you can draw, present and shoot just as fast using the manual thumb safety as no thumb safety. During the draw, the thumb safety is flicked off as sights come on target(not before). Let's be realistic. Friend here in town recently retired with 26 years as a police officer. He had to go to a lot of high crime areas during that time but only had one shooting in 26 years.The actual likelihood for you to use your CCW is remote. What is not remote is a mistake during daily handling resulting in an accidental discharge. Yes, your finger is your safety and your safety is in your brain but slip ups do happen. The thumb safety is one more step before discharge and it is a good idea. However, you should always use the best safety techniques and never expect a safety to keep you safe.
 
I always assumed the Shield safeties were passive due to being flat and fairly stiff so you don't accidentally tick it on.
 
I have a lifelong habit of reflexively swiping the safety on, whether the handgun is equipped with a safety or not. It seems that I don't have such a reliable habit of swiping it off when I'm preparing to fire. I can't count the times at the range when I have drawn, aimed, and pulled the trigger, and nothing happened... because the safety was still on. I don't even want to think about encountering that in a life or death self defense situation.

I have finally adjusted to the fact that on a modern striker-fired DAO handgun, strict trigger discipline is the best safety, and if the mechanical safety is not there, I can't disable the gun by inadvertently using it.
 
I have a safety on my 45 shield because that was the only one the LGS had. I never use it so I'd say there's no difference.
 
There's a reason that police do not carry a weapon w/a safety, and w/a round chambered.
 
As others, I bought the first shield 9 with safety. I don't generally buy pistols with a safety, but the shield 9 safety seemed so unobtrusive compared to all the other M&P pistols that I thought it'd be ok, and it certainly is.
 
When the SHTF, you will automatically do what you have been trained to do.. Those of you that are too lazy to practice with releasing a safety as you draw your weapon, will probably do better to buy a weapon without a safety.. Those who have used and trained with safeties on their weapons, and who regularly train with releasing the safety as you draw your weapon, the safety is just another feature that will help prevent A.D's and will give you a fraction of a second additional time, if you are in a struggle with someone for your weapon.. I have three Shield's, two 1911 model .45's and several .22 semi-auto's and they all have safeties.. I love safeties and use them.....

JMHO

Dave
 
My 9MM shield has no manual safety, my 45 Shield does. I actually wish they both did. Im still not completely comfortable with striker fired pistols.
I do like to switch the safety on when reholstering, then off when done. Its a habit I have developed.
 
In my other posts I've been a revolver guy since the 70's. My 2 week old .380 Shield EZ which I love because somebody finally came out with an auto that acts like a revolver. Point and shoot. I brought the No manual safety model because I feel the grip safety is enough. I've been carrying her racked and ready to go.
 
One afternoon I lost my 5906 in a scuffle with a robbery suspect. By the grace of God, he did not know how to release the safety. I've been retired 13 years and I still like pistols with safeties.

If you look back to the 60's and 70's when Smith was trying to get police agencies to buy their semi auto 9's, the retention issue was one of their biggest selling points. The problem was that those agencies didn't want to take the time to properly train with the safety/decock so they just did away with using the safety as a safety. That's how we ended up with so many DAO, decock, ect., ect., platforms. All in a search to have a gun that performed like a revolver but was easy to reload and held more bullets. The striker fired things that we are using now are really just a compromise of this doctrine. The point is if you want to carry with a safety engaged, then go for it. It really isn't slower to have to disengage a safety when drawing the gun. What you do need to do is stick with your decision and practice with the gun in the condition it is carried. The problem comes when you go back and forth between carrying with the safety on or off.
 
There's a reason that police do not carry a weapon w/a safety, and w/a round chambered.

Yes there is but the reason isn't that a safety is too obtrusive, it's that most police agencies train to the lowest common denominator and don't want to take the time to properly train with the gun to incorporate the use of a manual safety.
 
My shield is MA version with a 10 pound trigger so I am confident that it is a safe gun to carry without a safety.
 
It doesnt take any time, It should just be part of establishing a proper grip. Which u learn by practice and dry fire.
What it can do for is GAIN u some time to react in the event ur gun gets grabbed or picked up by someone unfamiliar with it.
I see zero negative to a manual thumb safety and possible positives.

If someone doesn't consistently train with the safety there can be problems with not disengaging. I have a safety on my shield and I use it but I've always owned pistols with a frame mounted down sweep manual safety and disengage it without even thinking on draw.

The shield's safety in particular might be slightly easier to possibly miss than one on a 1911 style, HK, taurus pt111 g2, etc.

Also the police, contrary to public belief, tend to be poorly trained with their firearms, with many if not most only shooting a couple of times a year. I know its not nice to beat up on police (and I know a couple) but one common theme that repeats over and over again with these mass school shootings (columbine, sandy hook, florida, etc) is that the police, when found, were always hiding behind their vehicles in the parking lots while shots were being fired. The surpreme court for countless times has upheld their right to do this.

Be smart, be safe.
 
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