It looked to me as if your point was "just as easily"...you're probably right though, I may have another revolver lockup on me before I pass away..You literally just proved my point, revolvers can lock-up.
Only time I've ever had a revolver lock up was actually just at the most recent range trip where there was a brass bur under the rim of a cartridge that prevented the cartridge from fully seating. Outside of that, never had a revolver malfunction other than them getting tougher toward the end of a box of 50 cartridgesIt looked to me as if your point was "just as easily"...you're probably right though, I may have another revolver lockup on me before I pass away..![]()
I absolutely agree with you the Security of knowing that firearm will be there when needed!I hope this question is in the right Forum.
I like both and my collection reflects that but I still feel more secure about my revolvers than I do with any semi-auto I own. I carry either depending on my mood but when the SHTF it's the revolver that will go bang every time.
Does anyway agree? Disagree?
OP, I see you have a LEO experience. Were you trained with a revolver at the Police Academy?I hope this question is in the right Forum.
I like both and my collection reflects that but I still feel more secure about my revolvers than I do with any semi-auto I own. I carry either depending on my mood but when the SHTF it's the revolver that will go bang every time.
Does anyway agree? Disagree?
I see it from a different perspective… Not living in town makes security a higher concern., Of course, I don't live in or near a big city where random violence is commonplace, so perhaps I've gotten somewhat complacent.
I carry a Glock 23 in the woods against black bear and cougar (as well as any possible 2-legged predator). Though Glocks are renowned for their reliability, I think I would feel more secure with a revolver because 1) I can carry a more powerful cartridge (.357 mag) than .40 S&W; 2) It will go off at extremely close range, i.e. pressed against the animal, where a semi-auto won't; and 3) If I have to fire one-handed in a split-second it won't limp-wrist.I hope this question is in the right Forum.
I like both and my collection reflects that but I still feel more secure about my revolvers than I do with any semi-auto I own. I carry either depending on my mood but when the SHTF it's the revolver that will go bang every time.
Does anyway agree? Disagree?
Not an expert but I think I do not agree. I shoot both revolver and semi. I have experienced several typical failures with semi. Maybe just luck but I have never experienced a revolver failure. I shoot maybe 40% revolver and 60% semi so the respective frequency is pretty valid.Revolvers can lock-up or misfire just as easily as a semi-auto.
According to experts and accounts of deadly confrontation, ANY jam and you are done. I doubt that in any deadly confrontation that entails only 2 to 3 seconds, clearing a semi jam is feasible for continued health. That goes for predators of all types; human and non. (Just saw a video of a bear attack... there was no chance for fail recovery .)I tend to agree with one caveat. If a revolver does jam you are probably done. An auto gives you a chance to recover. That concerns me more than capacity.
Revolvers do break too. I have had one go belly up on me, and I wasn't hot-rodding it either.Not an expert but I think I do not agree. I shoot both revolver and semi. I have experienced several typical failures with semi. Maybe just luck but I have never experienced a revolver failure. I shoot maybe 40% revolver and 60% semi so the respective frequency is pretty valid.
Furthermore all of the literature and comments I see constantly purport revolver reliablility surpasses semi. As has been mentioned already there are many mechanical things that can go wrong with semi as compared to revolver. But that is just one aspect. Overall I prefer semi for a number of reasons; but gross reliablity is not one of them.
WRONG. On its face it's Wrong.
Part of CCW with an auto is learning how to clear jams. Everyone who carries a semi must learn how. There are drills for it. Failure to feed, failure to eject, stove pipes. Every type of jam has a different way to clear it, so you do all of them when a jam occurs. And, mag floor plates let go and dump all your rounds on the ground ... I've had all of them happen.
It is not a concern when carrying a revolver. Long practice sessions with a revolver are the only times a lock up from fouling or metal expansion from the heat in a very tight cyl gap occurs. I doubt anyone is going to go through 200 rounds in a gunfight.
Failure to fire? Simply pull the the revolver's trigger again.
I've never had jams competing with a revolver. Not enough rounds in a stage are fired to foul a revolver. Between stages I just brushed the forcing cone with a brass wire brush. Gun cools. Good to go. That's prevention.
I've had jams when competing with a semi with hot and cold guns. They happen to everyone.
Semi-autos jam OFTEN. Prepare for it.
You haven't shot enough revolver yet.... I noted elswhere, I shoot both. I have experienced multiple semi fails. I have yet to encounter a revolver fail.
Confidence is the most important thing, and I glad you mentioned that.I carried a Model 19 2.5" for many years. Long after other agencies had pistols. I always felt at a disadvantage. I was then issued a P229 in 9mm followed by a P229 in 357 SIG. I NEVER had a failure with either one. I was required to shoot once a month, sometimes more.
If one does their research and finds the right pistol and ammunition and most importantly, shoots at least once a month, you can have confidence in that combo. As others have stated, it takes me about a second to clear a stove-pipe in a pistol. Plus, the enemy we face to day are all carrying pistols with high capacity magazines.
I totally agree and will carry both but I love my "Snubby"! I know it will go bang and continue to do so until I have gone through the cylinder.I hope this question is in the right Forum.
I like both and my collection reflects that but I still feel more secure about my revolvers than I do with any semi-auto I own. I carry either depending on my mood but when the SHTF it's the revolver that will go bang every time.
Does anyway agree? Disagree?
In a law enforcement situation I agree, but for personal protection on the street a revolver, even a five shot revolver is more than adequate. The odds of getting into a protracted gun fight for a civilian are minuscule. Go with whatever you are comfortable but the odds of a civilian getting into a gun fight situation are very very small. You have much more risk just getting into a car or airplane. Be happy, do what you are comfortable with, none of use get out of this world alive.I play with revolvers, I stake my life on a Semi Auto pistol.
I don't carry for fashion, I carry for the stakes.
Anyone who relies on a firearm professionally carries a Semi Auto pistol.
That's called a clue where I come from....![]()
I've always said that if someone lives somewhere that a gun battle is an actual situation they need to be prepared for then they seriously need to get out of there and move. Carrying a firearm for self defense is for *self defense*. Anyone who finds themselves in a gun battle in their day to day life screwed up hard at some point leading up to it.In a law enforcement situation I agree, but for personal protection on the street a revolver, even a five shot revolver is more than adequate. The odds of getting into a protracted gun fight for a civilian are minuscule. Go with whatever you are comfortable but the odds of a civilian getting into a gun fight situation are very very small. You have much more risk just getting into a car or airplane. Be happy, do what you are comfortable with, none of use get out of this world alive.
Believe it or not you actually do choose when where and how. I don't pick fights or get into trouble. I don't go to places where people pick fights and start trouble. I don't go out late at night. My home defense plan is to stay in my room lock the door and shoot anyone who tries to come in my bedroom door. When someone road rages I get away from them and stay away.I wish I had the power to predict what my potential self defense fight is going to look like, Where it will happen, how many are involved, How long it will last...
Then I wouldn't even need a gun, I would just stay home that day...lol But apparently many of you who posted have..
It's not going to happen at all... but if it does, it's going to be one guy and it's going to be very close and will need less then 5 rounds. Oh, and you will come out the winner.
Disagree. I was a gunsmith in NYC when NYPD only carried revolvers, Smiths, Colts and Rugers. I also did warranty repairs for S&W and Colt. The overwhelming majority of repairs I did were revolvers, not pistols. Revolvers can fail, some in spectacular ways.I hope this question is in the right Forum.
I like both and my collection reflects that but I still feel more secure about my revolvers than I do with any semi-auto I own. I carry either depending on my mood but when the SHTF it's the revolver that will go bang every time.
Does anyway agree? Disagree?