After you acquire a handgun you have to figure out what to do with it. Are you going to carry it on your person, or leave it in your vehicle or at home? Obviously it is most readily accessible if you carry it in a holster. This is also the most secure place for your weapon. You know absolutely where it is and who has it. If you decide on holster carry buy the best quality you can find. It makes no sense to spend several hundred dollars on a handgun and then stuff it into a $15 one size fits all leather sleave. A well designed holster will hold the weapon securely without the use of thumb snaps, etc.; will allow you to assume the correct firing grip while your gun is in the holster; will not allow access to the trigger while the weapon is holstered; and it will retain its shape so that you can reholster with one hand. Handguns can also be carried conviently in a fannypack or a purse. If you carry in a purse, personal planner, etc., you must train yourself to always retain control of it. It takes a lot of practice to learn to never set it down and move away from it without securing it somehow. The next step is to learn how to get your handgun into action as rapidly as possible without shooting yourself in the ass or the foot (which wastes ammo and and impairs your ability to survive a shootout). Ideally you should attend course where you can learn the correct skills and tactics from the start. I took personal handgun courses from the American Small Arms Academy and Front Sight. Other well known schools are Gunsight, Thunder Ranch, and Lethal Force Institute. Two good books to purchase are "The Modern Technique of the Pistol" by Gregory Boyce Morrison and "Combat Handgunnery" by Chuck Taylor. Both books cover all the basic gun handling skills, defensive tactics, and principles of firearms safety. T hey also break down the presentation from the holster (quick draw) into individual steps which can be repeated until they are programmed into your muscle memory. When an action is repeated 3,000 times it becomes a programmed response which is performed automatically. Because of that I couldn't possibly fire too soon during a high speed presentation. To shoot myself during my draw I would literally have to slow down and do it intentionally. Keep your powder dry, David Neilson
On Tuesday, January 1, 2002, at 06:18 PM, david wrote:
The next step is to learn how to get your handgun into action as rapidly as possible without shooting yourself in the ass or the foot (which wastes ammo and and impairs your ability to survive a shootout). Ideally you should attend course where you can learn the correct skills and tactics from the start. I took personal handgun courses from the American Small Arms Academy and Front Sight. Other well known schools are Gunsight, Thunder Ranch, and Lethal Force Institute.
If any body in the bay area is interested in taking these sorts of classes, I know a local instructor who is fairly good, and a lot cheaper than going to many of these.
-- "Those without creative minds and agile fingers are of course welcome to hurry up with my fries. And they'll probably use a GUI to take my order, too." - Tom Christiansen
participants (2)
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david
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Petro