Seismic Sam wrote:oneunder wrote:I carried for a while without one chambered. Then I ran across this video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bMbIC0RPBRs&feature=plcp
He makes some good points. Whether you like him or not is a different story. Congrats on the permit!
Excellent video!!
However, I'm still going to stick my head out from under my bridge and ask "Why are you carrying if you don't have 100% confidence in the gun you're using, and possibly 100% confidence that you can/will use it if you have to??"
Nervous about people seeing the gun is normal, and quickly goes away. But you need to be honest with yourself about WHY you don't want to carry with the gun completely ready, and where this nervousness is really coming from. And quite frankly, being nervous about people seeing the gun has NOTHING to do with whether it's unloaded, loaded with an empty chamber, or cocked and locked. So spend some time figuring this out, and from the comment that you only got about three minutes range time DOES make me wonder who your instructor was, (and I can guess, too...), and it's abuntantly clear that you need to spend HOURS shooting HUNDREDS of rounds of ammo at the range to get completely familiar with the gun. PTC courses are instruction, and instruction only, and even the best PTC with the most range time doesn't even to BEGIN to be a substitute for getting confidence in your gun and your own ability to use it without even thinking about it, which is what's really necessary if you're going to carry.
plblark wrote:I shoot the carry mag at the start of the practice session then shoot range stuff, then reload. If I were being economical, I'd drop the carry mag and download it to x (+ the one in the chamber) and shoot that. Then I'd be shooting some full house SD loads but not all of them and wouldn't have to deal with setback.
Seismic Sam wrote:The other thing you can do is load the mag, and with the slide back and locked and the gun pointing down but NOT at one of your feet, drop a round into the chamber, and then let the slide snap home.
Countryfried Frank wrote:I don't blame you for not having one in the chamber. There are plenty of good reasons for and against. I won't recommend one manner of carry over another for you but I will recommend that you train like you carry. Snap Caps are great for dry fire practice just double check to make sure your handgun is clear first.
sgruenhagen44 wrote:I guess I fail to see one advantage of carrying a weapon that is not fully loaded. Enlighten me please.
sgruenhagen44 wrote:I guess the way I see it is that, you don't pull the trigger and it doesn't go bang. And everyone is happy and safe. My gun has a manual safety and I got a lot of crap from glock guys saying carry guns should not even have safeties.
Fyrwys wrote:sgruenhagen44 wrote:...I guess I fail to see one advantage of carrying a weapon that is not fully loaded. Enlighten me please...
I will...
I think you all are missing the point. The OP is not, initially, carrying the pistol for personal protection--he's carrying it to get used to carrying a pistol. Once he feels comfortable doing so, as he stated, he will begin carrying for personal protection with one in the pipe. I think most here can appreciate what it feels like carrying the first time (or few times); I'm printing, everyone knows, it's going to go bang for no reason, etc... While the points made here are valid and very real in terms of carrying empty for self defense, that's not his goal at this point. Get off his ass.
connsolo wrote:My first carry gun was an sp101. Just felt more comfortable with a wheel gun. Felt more transparent to me. I still carry it occasionally. A double action piece might help you feel more comfortable carrying with one in the chamber. Just a thought.
rtk wrote:plblark wrote:I shoot the carry mag at the start of the practice session then shoot range stuff, then reload. If I were being economical, I'd drop the carry mag and download it to x (+ the one in the chamber) and shoot that. Then I'd be shooting some full house SD loads but not all of them and wouldn't have to deal with setback.
This is good advice.
Ivan45 wrote:Clearing your weapon of your carry rounds gives you a functional piece of mind. Worth the price
XDM45 wrote: I'm all for testing it, but every time? I don't think that's needed.
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