Firearm -- % of time carried
Glock 27 -- 90%
Ruger LCP or LCR (have both) -- 5%
S&W Mod. 66(.357) -- 3%
EAA EZ-9 -- 2%
My Sigma has been relegated to "house gun". Not a fan of that trigger, but I can't bring myself to sell it. I know I'm not the only one here who just isn't...
Three things:
1- I've seen it claimed that the victim himself was actually the aggressor; I haven't seen anything in writing that proves this to be the case. So for now, I will assume his girlfriend's iPod was stolen by the girls, as the story reads.
2- All this crap about a "fair fight" is...
I teach concealed carry safety training classes in Arkansas. Here's what I tell my students: (1) Carry the biggest caliber you will carry. (2) Carry the largest capacity you will carry. (3) Practice with it often, both loaded (life-fire) and unloaded (dry-fire).
People have to make these...
Every day: Sigma .40, Ruger LCP (always one, sometimes both).
Backwoods: S&W Model 66
Wife carries HK USP9 on her person or Ruger LCR in her purse.
Favorie gun: EAA EZ9 (more accurate than wife's high-end gun and all my friends' custom 1911s and Glocks). Nothing against those of course...
That'd be me. ;) It have the toughest time keeping my eyes open when I'm shooting my LCP.
Every other gun... I do fine. :)
There's just something about having to (a) squeeze the trigger so hard that blood vessels start busting and (b) knowing it's going to hurt like the dickens. :barf:
I used to be young and stupid. Now I'm just stupid.
When my bride and I first met, money was never a problem. Sure, we had money problems, but we didn't really care. We were young, after all. Fastest Internet package? No problem. All the premium channels on the satellite dish? Sure. New...
If they'd let me walk around with an AR-15, I would do it. Fact is, you never know what you're going to need. That's why, when it comes to caliber, we say, "carry the most gun you can". Why shouldn't that apply to capacity as well? "Carry the most lead you can!" :cool:
This is coming...
My primary carry is a S&W Sigma 40 or a S&W Model 66. Both large guns. Model 66 is HEAVY, too.
BUG is a Bersa .380 CC.... it gets less and less carry these days.
Congratulations on your new revolver! My first handgun was a Smith & Wesson revolver, but I've fired many Taurus revolvers and think they're fine firearms. I'd feel great having one in my pocket... or in my gun safe... or in my car.... well, you get the picture. :D
Enjoy it! As others are...
Yes. Tucking in a shirttail. Belt and holster went upside down, pistol fell to the floor. My wife and I stared in disbelief and horror for what seemed like 5 minutes (though it was less than a second).
I'm often surprised that a guy can carry a gun for 25, 30, or even 40+ years and not become a gun nut... but it happens. :D
What's wrong with those guys?! ;)
I thought about one before finally settling on something in .40 (trying to keep the number of calibers to reload to a minimum). Everyone I spoke with in the process told me to buy it and never look back.
I could have predicted how this thread would go.
People who own S&W's: NO, their quality is great.
People who own Rugers: YES, Smiths suck. Buy a Ruger.
People who own Colts: YES, Smiths suck. Buy a Colt.
See the common thread?
In my experience, new Smiths are as good as old ones. That is...
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