Keep in mind fella's, that according to the last FBI stats I saw......a few years back.....anyone who has six shots in their handgun AND actually winds up involved in a shooting - will likely not need to reload at all. Regards 18DAI
The average CCW holder is in that same position MAYBE 4 times in their lives.
I chuckled when I read the thought that without a magazine someone who steals the gun cannot use it and the mags are special order.... Ha ha ha...
An M&P can be fired just fine with no mag and a mag safety. Of course you'll only fire the one in the pipe, but thinking the gun is completely unusable is pretty naive. All that is required is the mag safety lever be moved up. Obviously a guy that steals your gun can easily push the lever up with a pencil, a paint stir stick, even a sponge pushed in the mag well will immediately disable the mag safety. I've done it. Look at yours.
I disconnected the one on my .40. Why? I bought the gun for the ability to make loud noises when I pull the trigger. If the mag pops out 1/2" it would cease making loud noises. So let's say I pull the gun and I accidently drop the mag in the grass at night as a BG is attacking me? Or has anyone heard of M&P's dropping mags on their own? Seems like several fellas here have had it happen. Or maybe you are in a struggle and the mag button gets pressed and you want to shoot and can't.
My M&P9 doesn't have one from the factory, and my .40 doesn't have one from my kitchen table. If I want one I can put one in either gun, until then I like being in control of when I can shoot.
Good to know.Not for me because Im not buying an M&P, but someone might benefit from that post.
The only time I have ever dropped a magazine is when I intended to. Why is it that a shooter can be disciplined enough to not touch the trigger by accident under stress; but hitting the mag release negligently is somehow inevitable?
And if a man is so stressed out that he is functionally incapable of controlling whether he hits the magazine release then it seems I have no worries about a felon accurately shooting the one round in my 459 while simultaneously holding a pencil against the disconnect block up the magwell.![]()
Perfect response. Somehow, a man should be so well trained that he will not touch the trigger on a Glock, but so poorly trained that he might drop the magazine. And accidentally dropping the mag or engaging a manual safety is something that I have NEVER done, and I got in and out of a police car, and rolled with quite a few perps. Sorry, but the whole "mag disconnects can ge me killed" argument is mall ninja hype.
If mag safeties are so unbelievably wonderful then we all should have them on every gun.
How in the world did Glock ever sell one gun without one? They are idiots! Mag safeties are the greatest thing ever! I wonder why S&W even offers their guns both ways. Stupid stupid stupid. Obviously having a mag safety is never EVER going to be a problem, but sure could save the life of a good guy if he's in a struggle for his weapon and sees he will lose it to the BG, he can easily find the mag release button, clear the bottom of teh grip, push the mag release and have the mag drop to render the gun useless, thus sparing his own life and probably hundreds of others that would eventually get shot when the BG reloaded once he was dead.
My comment about the pencil bypassing the mag safety was directed to the poster that claimed he took his mag out before turning in a weapon to security, thereby rendering it completely useless until a BG could special order a new mag from S&W, which are on backorder anyway....
Yes in 10 seconds I could put a pencil in the grip, tape it down and have a functioning single shot pistol. In 20 seconds I could strip the gun and bend the mag safety to render it useless. In two minutes I could remove the mag safety completely.
Glock sells guns because they make a decent product (certainly not "perfection") and they are cheap. PD's went to them because they are even cheaper for them to buy than for a regular civilian, and because they don't want to be "bothered" to train their officers on proper gun handling. We did one week in the academy on the range. That's it. And I just find it so amusing that some people are so vehemently against them because of some perceived threat that is so small, that nobody has even been able to find ONE instance where the presence of a mag disconnect got somebody hurt or killed, or even somebody ACTUALLY performing a tactical reload under fire, yet when confronted with ACTUAL cases of the disconnect saving lives (both in a struggle for a weapon, AND for when somebody not properly trained in handgun use that actually thinks the gun is unloaded when the mag is out, ESPECIALLY children who get to their parent's gun), they shrug it off.
It's simple:
the odds of getting involved in a self defense shooting are astronomical.
The odds of having the training (and I don't mean a weekend at Blackwater or a subscription to SWAT magazine) and the presence of mind to not only think of doing a tactical reload under fire, BUT having the abilty to do one under stress are even smaller.
The odds of needing that ONE shot in the 1.5 seconds DURING that perfectly executed tactical reload are even smaller.
The odds of that ONE shot you just fired even IF you managed to pull off that reload actually ending the fight are even smaller, AND you now have an empty gun, with the slide NOT locked back, requiring you to reload with BOTH hands, and an enraged wounded perp bearing down on you (even IF you managed to hit him)
If you compete, I get the aversion to them. If you don't, and REALLY think they're a liabilty, you're living in Fantasyland.
Try to wrap your mind around what I say and forget about tactical reloads. I couldn't care less about tactical reloads.
On a mag safety gun:
If you are struggling for control of a weapon and you touch the mag release.. You have an inop weapon.
If you reach for your concealed weapon and you touch the mag release.... You have an inop weapon.
If you realize you have few rounds left and drop your mag and then drop your new mag, until you get that mag.... you have an inop weapon.
If there is a shell in the chamber and I pull the trigger guess what I want to happen? Meanwhile you guys can come up with all kinds of goofy scenarios why you DON'T want the gun to fire when there is a shell in the chamber and you are pulling the trigger.
For those of you, I think you should have mag safeties. And you should have magnetic disconnects and a matching ring you must wear. And you should have a grip safety. And a thumb safety. And a plug in the barrel that has to be removed first. And a locked holster to keep the gun in. And a key code on the slide. And you should keep the shells at least 200 yards from the gun at all times.
No military weapon in the world has a mag safety. Why do you think that is?
And you talk about stove piping a shell without the mag in? So if the choice is either firing the one shot I have to save my life and having the gun stove pipe or having a completely worthless gun with a shell in the chamber... I'll take the stove pipe.
No military weapon in the world has a mag safety. Why do you think that is?
The pros of the magazine safety, IMO, are that it is a kill switch in the event of a gun grab - and in situations where your pistol has to be taken off your person, lock box at the jail, trunk of the car, ect.
Mas Ayoob has written about many officers whos lives were saved by the magazine safety in their pistol. When the officers felt control of their handgun slipping away in tussels with felons, they simply hit the mag release and rendered their primary handgun into a paperweight.......while cancelling the felons ticket with their BUG. I love a happy ending.![]()
The only two cons I've heard of, mostly from "tactical" types, is that it somehow effects trigger pull - it does in the Browning High power but not on any S&W I've ever shot - and that it precludes firing the round in the tube while changing mags.
Those that proclaim mag safeties "precludes firing the round in the tube" don't know how to operate a S&W 3rd generation pistol. By not releasing the trigger all the way forward, after a shot, you can still fire the round in the tube, with no mag inserted, in a S&W 3rd gen pistol equipped with a mag safety.
Something I've never understood is WHY do you need to fire the round in the tube while changing mags? Are you backing away from an advancing attacker and suddenly feel the need to reload? Are you in the middle of a huge empty parking lot with no cover? Why? I think that the folks who protest mag safeties based on the fact that SOME pistols may be incapable of firing the round in the tube during a mag change......should worry more about their training and tactics, IMO.
I have mag safeties in all my duty guns and several of my off duty semi auto's. I like them and consider them a positive feature. Regards 18DAI
So the lesson Mr. Needham learned from that incident was he will never ever have pistol with a mag safety. Wow well no offence to Mr. Needham, the lesson i would have hopefully learned from that incident was i really need to practice properly seating my mags more, not make a judgement call on a type of pistol, thats just me though. My personal take on not being able to fire the last round in the chamber during a reload in a pistol with a mag safety argument, is this; who says that being able to fire that last round in the chamber during a reload is going to be enough to stop the attacker no one can guarantee that. Especialy if your attacker is all hopped up on guff balls, wich is more common than most people think, then it does not matter what caliber your pistol is chamberd in, only how many rounds it takes before they are no longer a threat. Or maby you rush the shot and just nick the attacker or miss them all together, but ha none of us would ever rush a shot, or ever miss would we. You never know, strange things happen in bad incidents. The point is this, for me at least, i would rather seat my mags properly, and know i have all the ammo i need to dill with the threat, rather that worrie about wether or not my pistol has a mag safety, and can fire the last round in the chamber during a reload. But like i said thats just me.Silversmok3 said:I was reading Jeff Cooper's old writings online, and in the volume contained Barry Needham's journal of his visit to Orange Gunsite before Jeff Cooper sold it.On the last day it rained on the range, Col. Cooper commanded his students on the line, and on the last drill in a desert rainstorm Mr. Needham had to do this drill. In his words:
Then we come to the man on man competition. Two people, side by side. Three eight inch steel plates at ranges between 7 and 15 meters. Drop two plates, reload, drop the third plate. First person done wins that round. Double elimination torment. At the end there is only one. Sounds easy, it isn't. You can tell if you are ahead or behind. The pressure builds in each round. I won the first round. Second round, I miss the second plate but pick it up with a fast second shot. I'm behind. Reload, drop the mag, new mag, fast - fast - fast, pick up the target, frontsightpresss! My plate goes flying backwards with a center hit of 10mm a few hundredths of a second before the other plate tips over.
I check my weapon, the magazine is hanging half out of the butt of the pistol - I hadn't seated it fully. As I start to correct the situation Dennis quizzes me,
"Did you notice what happened?"
"Yes Sir!"
"Why didn't you seat your magazine fully?"
"I was behind Sir! Second and third rules of a gun fight Sir! Cheat and win Sir!"
I won that round, I guess I came up with the correct answer. I will never, ever, have a magazine safety on one of my tactical pistols.