Photog
Member
Don't know if many of you read it, but was at the local bookstore the other night and was looking through the latest issue of American Handgunner. Clint Smith had an article in which he stated that a double action revolver should never be fired in single action mode. I am not a big Clint Smith fan, but I thought this article was pretty bad.
I have hunted for many years with a M29 and have never taken any of the game I shot in double action mode. I have also used a M24 and M25-2 for some bullseye competition as well as watched others, and never seen it done double action.
When Smith & Wesson reintroduced the 4" 44 Special fixed sight revolver several years ago, I had the chance to talk to Mr. Smith at a large show. The gun pictured in his article on it was a non lock gun. I asked him if that configuration was going to be available to the general public and he replied in a very condescending tone that most shooters are not safe enough without the internal lock on the gun. I won't rehash the lock vs. no lock debate, but I found his attitude towards the average shooter, as he called them, to be very poor.
If you are a big Clint Smith fan, I don't mean to insult you, but just wanted to give my opinion on what he said. Double action revolvers have been around for over 150 years, and a majority of them function both DA/SA. I would think by now, if they are as unsafe as he states in his article, that the DA/SA format would have gone by the wayside many decades ago.
Unfortunately, I believe he is using the unsafe practices of some shooters to lay blame on the gun, instead of where it belongs. In my 50 yrs of shooting, I have never seen a gun (within specs, not messed with) discharge unless the trigger was pulled. Doesn't matter if it was SA, DA, DA/SA, semi or full auto, it is the person behind the gun, and not the gun that you nto worry about. If you read this article, I don't think he has quite figured that out yet.
I have hunted for many years with a M29 and have never taken any of the game I shot in double action mode. I have also used a M24 and M25-2 for some bullseye competition as well as watched others, and never seen it done double action.
When Smith & Wesson reintroduced the 4" 44 Special fixed sight revolver several years ago, I had the chance to talk to Mr. Smith at a large show. The gun pictured in his article on it was a non lock gun. I asked him if that configuration was going to be available to the general public and he replied in a very condescending tone that most shooters are not safe enough without the internal lock on the gun. I won't rehash the lock vs. no lock debate, but I found his attitude towards the average shooter, as he called them, to be very poor.
If you are a big Clint Smith fan, I don't mean to insult you, but just wanted to give my opinion on what he said. Double action revolvers have been around for over 150 years, and a majority of them function both DA/SA. I would think by now, if they are as unsafe as he states in his article, that the DA/SA format would have gone by the wayside many decades ago.
Unfortunately, I believe he is using the unsafe practices of some shooters to lay blame on the gun, instead of where it belongs. In my 50 yrs of shooting, I have never seen a gun (within specs, not messed with) discharge unless the trigger was pulled. Doesn't matter if it was SA, DA, DA/SA, semi or full auto, it is the person behind the gun, and not the gun that you nto worry about. If you read this article, I don't think he has quite figured that out yet.