On Sep 7, 10:15 am, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote:
"HK" wrote in message
...
Short Wave Sportfishing wrote:
On Fri, 07 Sep 2007 13:25:54 GMT, "JoeSpareBedroom"
wrote:
"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message
...
On Fri, 07 Sep 2007 00:00:17 -0400, wrote:
The winner was always an old sargent who took his time and shot down
one per round, with a 2" revolver.
I have said for years that the reason is due to 13 round semi-auto
hand guns.
With a revolver, you only have six - makes you concentrate.
One of my favorite gun technique books suggests taking only 6 rounds to
the range, no matter what kind of handgun you're shooting. Good idea.
All my kids were trained that way. In fact, when my youngest went to
the Academy in SC, he noticed that the more bullets they were issues,
the more the used them.
He took his time, minimum shots and did well.
It's the revolver training.
I have a 9mm Glock, but I never carry it unless I'm in the woods. For
just carrying purposes, it's a .357 mag on a .38 frame.
I wouldn't "carry" a semi without a real safety, either, though I do like
shooting a Glock at the range. Is that a single or double action .357?
All semis have a "safety". One is the owner (hopefully). The other is a
holster that's correct for the situation at hand. If you still believe a
mechanical safety is needed, please explain why, in light of the fact that
revolvers don't have them.- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
I know a guy who shot himself in the foot pulliing a pistol out of a
holster. Now I know you are going to jump all over this one and tell
me everything he did wrong. Then I will tell you that I was not there,
and know as much about the incident as you do. Anyway, you asked why a
safety on a pistol? I give you my answer although I do not know if he
had a "holster that's correct for the situation at hand". I alway left
when firearms came to a party

Back then if a gun showed up either
somoeone was drunk, or someone was going to get hurt or both.