The biggest issue would be embarrassment, particularly if in a public restroom!
You had some experience with this when you were younger. Please tell us that story again, Uncle John!
The biggest issue would be embarrassment, particularly if in a public restroom!
You had some experience with this when you were younger. Please tell us that story again, Uncle John!
The MP is a reliable gun and would be extremely unlikely to go off just by hitting the floor should it fall out. The biggest issue would be embarrassment, particularly if in a public restroom!
LOL, no it never actually happened, I just could envision it though, gun hits the floor, fumbling to retrieve it, accidentally kicking it so that it skids across the floor under the stall door out into the open. Would make a great scene in a comedy cop movie!
LOL, no it never actually happened, I just could envision it though, gun hits the floor, fumbling to retrieve it, accidentally kicking it so that it skids across the floor under the stall door out into the open. Would make a great scene in a comedy cop movie!
I was talking about the other story, when you woke up in the bathroom at the bar?
Wasn't there an old song that went something like "The bathrooms all get prettier at closing time."
none of those holseters meed FL CCW requirements. Fl requires a strap to go across the weaponView attachment 894137 View attachment 894139 View attachment 894140 View attachment 894141 View attachment 894142 Holsters...top to bottom
Andrews Leather (#1-3)
Ritchie Bros. Leather
R. Grizzle (very long wait)
@redfalconf35
First hand experience with all of these. Andrews is surely #1.
The other makers are also very good.
I am not a fan of Kydex. Many others are.
For a belt, Zach’s Gun Belts and (again) Andrews Leather are top of the heap.
Shop wisely...don’t cut corners. You will regret it later on if you do.
We have a name for guns with nothing in the pipe. “Dead mans gun”Always one in the chamber. I only have Glocks. Sigs. And J frames. I never meant to not have manual safeties. But I like the simplicity.
Depends on the gun. Several of mine are meant to be carried with the chamber empty.We have a name for guns with nothing in the pipe. “Dead mans gun”
And which would those be? Anything post 1900 design date?Depends on the gun. Several of mine are meant to be carried with the chamber empty.
It does, but I'm left handed so I don't use it. Ironically (given my original stance in this thread), putting the safety on is a bridge too far for me.
Slightly. A Smith & Wesson DA model 4 from 1902-1903. But also several SAAs from the 1970s and early 1980s.And which would those be? Anything post 1900 design date?
Okay, I'm going to tell a true story when I actually failed in my situational awareness and failed to carry a round properly chambered..........