A retired trainer in my state carries dual 640 J-frames. One for easy access to either hand, at 4 and 8 o'clock, IIRC. That would be a lot heavier with normal large -frames.
I’m probably the exception to the rule. I’m packing all this right now. And forgot to add the 6 round speed strip in my pocket. But I’m also 6’4” and weigh 215.
A J frame in a pocket holster is just so convenient. Much simpler to just drop it in a pocket and go rather than put on an IWB holster. Especially if you are in and out a lot.
What attracts me to the J-Frame is ...Light Weight .
My 38 special Airweight J-Frame weighs only 12-13 ounces ...
It is so light that in a holster ...inside waist band or outside waist band, or even in a pocket ... it doesn't "pester" you all day pulling down on you .
I have a snub nosed 45 acp that I really love ... but it's a Boat Anchor all stainless steel and at the end of the day it's dragging me down to the point where the Airweight gets picked up because it's light and doesn't drag on me all day !
The older you get ... the more weight matters .
Gary
I hope I never need it.
It has sent well over 4,000 rounds downrange and spent more than 50,000 hours on my hip. I don't like pants pocket carry but occasional jacket/vest pocket is good. I like to know exactly where it is. Even so, there are too many times I realize it's not there. If I ever need it, I hope it's there. If I need it, and it is there, 5 will have to be enough.
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I don't practice fast drawing, drawing from concealment or speed reloading . I practice having a gun whenever possible. And I practice (a lot) putting 5 rounds into a 4" circle at 30 feet in < 5 seconds. I'm not fast. But after a 50-round practice session with 38 spls I can guarantee the next 5 .357 magnums will go into that same circle.
One thing that I've never seen posted is one's size when carrying. LEO and retired I'm assuming are rather tall, 6 ft. or better.
I'm 5'6" and 125 lbs. K frames and concealed carry, show me>>>.
I have a Combat Masterpiece (forget the model) and an M60 snubby.
I'm a 67 civilian, looking to get my CCP in Michigan. I'd like to know the best way to concealed carry my S&W M60-15.
I'm in Michigan. Winter, no problem. Summer, it's like south Florida. Suggestions???
I believe the stress response is overstated in the gun community. I love gun people. I really do. I am a gun people! Truth is we are dumb, just as dumb as anybody else, and we quote things to each other we have heard like it was proved.I'd love to own and carry one of the little .380s with minimal recoil and so small you can loose it in the smallest garment, but despite having shot as many as ten different ones, I can't seem to do much better than minute-of-man at 25yds.
A J-frame at that distance is a 3"-6" proposition for me.
Sure, 25yds is long for a personal encounter and 6" more than necessary, but I figure if I start there, by the time I pay the adrenaline penalty it's still a hit but if I start with a marginal situation then it might not be.
I think you (and your dad) are on to something...I believe the stress response is overstated in the gun community. I love gun people. I really do. I am a gun people! Truth is we are dumb, just as dumb as anybody else, and we quote things to each other we have heard like it was proved.
I got interested in this subject when I read "Stressfire" by Mas Ayoob, (great book). I realized that what he was describing doesn't happen to me. Well, I have never been shot at yet, but I am pretty sure anyway. Gimme a chance to find outMy brother was the same way. So was my Dad. Bro. and I figured it out from Dad's war stories especially when he was under fire on Okinawa. Bro. said it this way, "I can be very afraid, but I can still THINK." I agree that is how it feels for me too.
The Marines studied the phenomenon and determined that one in ten are not debilitated in any way by the stress response. (Similarly, they found that one in ten have the opposite reaction.) An important advancement was for the Corps to identify such a man during training school and give him the squad automatic weapon. I do not know how they do this, and no Marine has ever confirmed to me when or how the Corps does this, so TIFWIW. This is one of the many reasons that a USMC rifle squad is so much more effective than any other combat team on earth. They also have programs to minimize Combat/Operational Stress Reactions (COSRs) and COSRs casualties and related PTSDs.
Dad was a boxer in the Marine Corps. He said, "One in ten men have a glass jaw." He also thought that one in ten have an iron jaw. Dad was that way. Nobody could knock him out. Everybody else is on a spectrum between those extremes. Hopefully your assailant will go down easy, and you will not pay any adrenaline penalty in your marksmanship.
Please correct me anyone. I love to learn!
BrianD