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| Senior Member | Question on how you operate your Carry gun Ok, not to start an arguement, but I am curious. When your caring a Semi-auto, do you carry with one in the chamber or not. And if you carry with one in the chamber, do you remove the round when your done for the day. I have a safe place (lock box) to store my gun when I get home. I usually carry a 5 shot revolver (38 special), but am starting to carry my PT145 more now. I have been leaving it with a round in the chamber but on saftey (leave it on saftey when I carry it to) when I put it away. That way I can just grab it and go in the morning. So, I was looking for opinions on the way others work there carry guns. Thanks. |
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| | #2 |
| Senior Member | I carry my GLOCK 27 (no safety) with a round in the chamber and when I get home, I just take off my holster and put it next to my bed. The firearm never leaves the holster and the trigger is never exposed. Then, when I wake up, I get dressed and put on my holster. I use a Blackhawk SERPA CQC holster, so I don't worry about it "slipping out", due to requiring the depression of the lever to remove it from the holster.
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| | #3 |
| Senior Member | With an auto shooter that's the best way to carry. If you have to take time to rack the slide to chamber a round, you may end up on a slab. I carry mine with a round in the chamber and the hammer cocked with the safety on...Now this comment may cause an argument! When I get home, I take off my holster and place it beside my bed...after I carefully let the hammer down. |
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| | #5 | |
| Senior Member | Quote:
![]() Replace it? No reason to replace it unless you load and unload the gun excessively, and the bullet gets set back in the case. Chamber a fresh round and leave it there, an unloaded pistol ain't nothin' but a hammer. Last edited by rondog; 03-18-2008 at 03:02 PM. Reason: Automerged Doublepost | |
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| | #7 |
| Senior Member | I carry a 1911. I ALWAYS have mine chambered, hammer in the half-cocked position. It too stays close at night. Since we have 3 dogs, I would have plenty of time to clear my eyes to shoot accuratly. I love my dogs.
__________________ "KEEPIN MY POWDER DRY" |
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| | #8 |
| Senior Member | I have been using a Springfield EMP for carry. I use a Galco ankle holster. With the EMP the only way to have the safety on is with the hammer back. So I carry it with a round chambered. With the thumb release snapped, it is between the hammer and the firing pin. Also the trigger is completly covered. It is kept in nightstand when I'm not carrying it. I sometimes carry a Beretta Tomcat in a pocket holster. Fully loaded with one in the chamber. Safety on hammer down. I think how you carry depends a lot on the the type, make, and model of gun. Like Just A Car said, with a Glock you should make sure the trigger is covered.
__________________ You only live once, so make sure you shoot twice. |
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| | #9 |
| Senior Member | M1911A1 COCKED, LOCKED and ready to ROCK. As those of my generation might say. 8 doses of high speed lead poisioning ready for delivery SIR!
__________________ "You can have my Freedom when I'm done with it!" |
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| | #10 | |
| Senior Member | Quote:
In full-cock, the thumb safety blocks the hammer, trigger, sear and slide all from moving, and the gun is the safest it can be yet ready for action. You can't fire it from half-cock either, without going to full-cock first, so why bother? Half-cock is a no-no. The half-cock notch is really just another of J.M. Browning's safety devices, it's there to catch the hammer if it slips loose while you're cocking it. That's all it's there for. Last edited by rondog; 03-19-2008 at 12:39 AM. | |
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| | #11 |
| Senior Member | Nighthawk80, in the end, it's up to you and what you are trained with and most comfortable in doing. If you are not that comfortable, then I suggest until you are, to not do it. If you do it, and have a safety, keep the safety on at all tiems, until ready to shoot it, obviously. If you want to, but are hesitant, take some safety and training courses. All here can give you advice or say how they do it or suggest how you could, but in the end it is you doing it. Just take some safety courses and training courses and practice with some snap-caps (fake-ammo) and familiarize yourself with the gun as if it was loaded? JMHO.
__________________ I'd rather be tried by 12 than carried by 6! |
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| | #15 | |
| "Blazing Saddles" GOV ![]() | Quote:
Again, safety first is paramount. As some of you may recall... being a Wisconsin resident we are not allowed to carry concealed ... but that's the point, who will know? I'd rather be tried than carried... period. | |
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| | #16 | |
| Banned | Quote:
A SAFETY is a mechanical device, destined to FAIL. NEVER carry a round in the chamber. It takes but a second to chamber. If you read ALL of the gun accident reports, you will see two common causes of accidental fatallites. 1. I didn't know it was loaded 2. It went off when I was moving it The CHAMBER at all times, until you are ready to fire it, should be EMPTY. I know of guys who have shot their floor boards getting into their trucks or cars, I know a guy who shot his thumb off placing his chambered shotgun in the closet (lucky he didn't blow his silly head off). SAFETIES fail, Common sense will PREVAIL. You will also never, ever forgive yourself if someone handles your firearm, with the belief it is empty and kills them self or someone else by accident. I can also tell you all too many times the FIRE BARREL outside of our HQ would at least once per week have a shot fired into it, by someone who thought they cleared it. I always carreid my M1911 with a mag inserted and not chmabered, same with the Berretta. Learn to CLEAR IT at the end of every day and remove the mag and go through a SAFE process and the Process that is taught even in the most Basic Gun Handling Courses. BE SAFE and NOT sorry. Last edited by Wingwiper; 03-19-2008 at 10:32 AM. | |
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| | #18 | |
| Banned | Quote:
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| | #19 |
| Senior Member | Wingwiper I have to dispute your assertions, due to in at least from my experiences (Armorer, Combat instructor, Police Patrolman,Police Combat/self defense instructor 20+ years) with your conclusions. A properly designed safety, or groupings of safety features/designs are NOT designed to fail. That is not to say that SOME don't, however my experience has been that more often than not inadvertant discharges are 99.9% operator error in one way or another. John M. Brownings designs especially are extremely unlikely to fail simply because of the redundancy built into their function, As are Colts as well as others adoption of transfer bar safety systems. I have been carrying an M1911A1 both on and off duty since I was introduced to the sidearm in 1975, as well as having extensive training in other weapons including sidearms of allied friendly nations. I have always carried cocked and locked and in all those years of maintaining, carrying, using and training others in the sidearms use I have seen only one TRUE failure of any safety feature on an M191A1 and that wasn't the actual primary safety, A sear disconnect failed causing the weapon to function as a full auto. Now over a 20+ year professional carreer involving thousands of these pistols and several 10's of thousands of rounds of ammunition I think I can safetly state that carrying and keeping this design of pistols as well as others with properly designed safety features at condition 1 cocked and locked is both safe and proper as long as the operator is completely familiar with the weapon. Again this points once more to something everyone here has heard me state repeatedly! Get the training and practice practice practice until you KNOW what to do, how to do it, when to do it, and do it right 110% of the time. ![]() Last edited by ezearln; 03-19-2008 at 12:17 PM. |
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| | #20 |
| Super Moderator ![]() | I carry everything chambered and when I get home they all remain that way in order to ensure they are ready to be used
__________________ "Homeland Security is the responsibility of an armed citizen" ME http://webpages.charter.net/s.s.v/ |
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