I'm not gonna drop my pistol on the ground, nor am I ever gonna stomp on it, no matter what the instructor says or does to his own handgun
I'm not gonna drop my pistol on the ground, nor am I ever gonna stomp on it, no matter what the instructor says or does to his own handgun
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I have never missed a 1911 thumb safety, even before I started using an extended safety. I do not worry about a 1911 thumb safety getting me killed on the streets.
I did experience failure to fully depress a 1911 grip safety, during rifle-to-pistol transition drills, while attending my employer's patrol rifle certification class. Diagnosis: The mandated duty holster, the Safariland 070, makes it very difficult to obtain a proper firing grip, and with age, and a bout with Carpal Tunnel Syndrome, my right hand was becoming skinnier, with less flesh to press against the grip safety. This effectively ended my days of carrying a 1911 while on police patrol. The pistol was a Kimber Classic Custom, which does have a slightly extended grip safety.
I did not abandon the 1911 for personal-time carry. With a grip safety that allows a higher hold, a high-cut front strap/relieved trigger guard, and a holster allowing a proper grip from the beginning of the draw, I need not worry about the grip safety getting me killed on the streets. Actually, a proper carry holster enables me to shoot an original-pattern 1911 reliably, but the modern grip safety and frame mods provide an extra margin of reliability.
Notably, my employer's new standard duty holster, the Safariland 6360, with ALS/SLS, does allow me to obtain a proper firing grip on a 1911, and a recent policy change allows me to again carry a 1911 while in uniform, on duty. I now have a second duty rig assembled for my 1911, with the designated 6360 holster, but clearing the full-length 1911 during the draw is a challenge, with my long arms, short torso, and aging shoulder, so I am still carrying a G17 "primary," with the 1911 being brought along at work in a pouch, available to be deployed for special situations, such as longer-range environments.
My negative experience with a thumb safety occurred with the Browning Hi-Power thumb safety, in the mid-Nineties. A few times, I found myself locking-down my thumb, as if shooting a DA revolver, totally forgetting the thumb safety. This ended my short experiment with the BHP. Perhaps the rounded contours of the BHP, upon contact, cued my synapses to think "revolver," at the outset of the draw? This was with the Mk III safety lever, not the tiny old-school safety. I really liked the BHP, and considered replacing the Mk III safety with an old-school safety, adjusted to be tight, and carrying off-safe, Condition Zero, SAS-style. I thought better of it, and decided to sell the BHP.
Last edited by Rex G; 10-09-2016 at 11:05 AM.
Forgetting the video & the drama that goes with some ... The above quote is pretty much spot-on. I don't count carrying a 1911 as a machine gunner in my totals because I had zero idea what I was doing with a pistol.
23 years carrying a 1911A1 or one of two M&P models - all with thumb safeties. Last two & a half years have been with 9mm Glocks. Individually and from a uniformed patrol cop perspective, I strongly prefer an issued, duty pistol with a frame mounted mechanical safety. Provided, of course, the user is actually trained on its use. I'll steal Pat McNamara's quote about mechanical safeties being an "enabler, never a disabler."
Oh, and Ed L - your post was excellent as well sir.
The one I shot belongs to a buddy that has always been drawn to bargains and has been transitioning away from .40 when he realized he has/had a bunch of ammo. So he bought one and was bringing it out to chew through his stockpile.
Me OTOH, am awaiting the arrival of my 45 Shield, so my mad money has been spent for the moment.
And this is turning into a hijack...