In a BlackHawk! size 3 currently. Soon to be a Kramer, since they are having a sale.
I normally either wear Carhartt B151's, which I think have the best pocket for carry, or Wrangler 20X Jeans. It's a bit harder in jeans, but still works.
I have no experience with skinny jeans.
"And for a regular dude I’m maybe okay...but what I learned is if there’s a door, I’m going out it not in it"-Duke
"Just because a girl sleeps with her brother doesn't mean she's easy..."-Blues
For something like this you can use a timer app pretty well. Just fiddle with a par time until you're nailing that par time with one method, then test the other method for a bit and see if you are over or under par. Note that this is more idle curiosity then anything I think is a kilt in the streez differentiation.
Body shape as well. I never have to buy upsized waist sizes in casual pants because by the time my ass and thighs fit the pants/jeans the waist is already oversized. Other than pleated suit pants, pajama pants, and possibly Hammer Pants, pocket carry isn't usually an option for me.
Sorta around sometimes for some of your shitty mod needs.
Understood. Sparked curiosity here too. I've got an order of Comp I's I think will show up this week. I've always used HKS 36's as my primary reload in J's but Corona Boredom said let's try something new. A shootout (dry fire since our ranges are closed) of speed strip configs, vs HKS, vs Safariland might be interesting enough for a thread.
If you have a reloading setup, you can load some dummy rounds that will be the same profile as what you'd actually be loading. I loaded up 24 dummies years ago, no powder or primer, which work well. Where I went wrong originally was I marked them with red nail polish. Like an idiot I painted a ring around the brass at first, figuring that'd definitely keep me from accidentally mixing it with live ammo. Having no prior experience with nail polish I didn't realize how thick it went on. Don't do that, they won't chamber.
Sorta around sometimes for some of your shitty mod needs.
When I carried .357 revolvers on police patrol, I eventually settled upon carrying two particular Strips, one in each uniform shirt pocket. These Strips were in addition to the other ammo on my duty belt. The theory is that each of these Strips was for a two-round partial or “tactical” reload. The duty belt held speed-loaders and a 2x2x2 carrier. This was enough for me to deem the pocketed Strips to be expendable. Plus, more than two cartridges, per pocket, created a bothersome pendulum effect, until we were issued “super shirts.”
During personal time, I have generally used Strips loaded with either four or six. If I am carrying speed-loaders, and/or secondary/tertiary revolvers, I will not see the Strips as a go-to source for a complete reload, so a Strip with four cartridges, separated into two pairs, makes sense. If the Strips are my only spare ammo, for one weapon, I might carry each loaded with the full six.
I tried Mas Ayoob’s fives-rounds-per strip guidance, for a while, but found that five were no less-clumsy than the full six, perhaps because my skinny fingers had enough room to work as well with six as five. Others’ fingers will vary.
All of the above was/is guided by the S-L-O-W total time to completely reload, with a Strip, while being VERY fast for loading one or two. I am not trying to convince or convert anyone, or say that my way is better for anyone, other than myself.
For reference, I used a .44 Mag Model 629 for duty, from 1984 into 1985, a .41 Magnum Model 58 from 1985 until about 1990, detoured into .45 autos for a while, then used .357 Mag duty revolvers 1992-1997. I continued to use .357 revolvers as secondary weapons while on patrol, and during much personal time.
Trivia: A Bianchi Speed Strip, if first placed into very hot water, can be forced to accept .41 Magnum cartridges, if one skips spaces. Well, it was true in the Eighties. The material may have changed, over time.
Retar’d LE. Kinesthetic dufus.
Don’t tread on volcanos!
FWIW...
I live in South Central Alaska. I Pocket, AIWB, and Belt carry a J. In the colder temperatures, depending on the activity, inside or outside the home dictates carry location, and often only carry speedstrips.
My Speedstrips are 8 round 38/357. I load them 2/space/2/space/1...I find it is possible to manipulate a reload in really cold temps with or without gloves. Having the space between rounds allows me to handle the strip more securely, and carry out the reload more efficiently.
I carry the strips on my belt in a 8 round carrier. Even with gloves on I can find the carrier pouch on my belt as I use my thumb to clear the bottom of my coat, find the pouch, and extract the strip.
So far so good.
So a lot of guys may consider this redneck, ghetto, whatever, but I can tell you from years of doing so, it works.
A strip of EVA foam or leather on the back strap glued in place with hot glue, secured with hockey tape makes a world of difference in felt recoil back to the shooter.
I started with an earplug on the back strap years ago and through experimentation came to where I am at today. I used to shoot extended strings of fire with my J frame to the point that the web of my hand was literally missing chunks of skin and found that EVA foam allowed me to keep normal size grips and not get cut up. Now a small strip of leather is not quite as comfortable, but it disperses the recoil over a wider area, and I don't bloody up my hand with hot loads. I still can slide the gun into, and draw the gun from my pocket with ease. The hockey tape gives me a solid grip texture while securing the EVA/leather.