To chamber or not to chamber
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Re: To chamber or not to chamber
There is no question here....you carry a gun with a round in the chamber.
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Re: To chamber or not to chamber
I keep the chamber empty when I'm hunting until I'm ready to shoot, but self defense guns have a round in the chamber.
This will only hurt a little. What comes next, more so.
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Re: To chamber or not to chamber
Crazy sword guy says always be chambered.....
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Re: To chamber or not to chamber
Seems like a lot of unneccesesary noise.Cobra Medic wrote:I keep the chamber empty when I'm hunting until I'm ready to shoot, but self defense guns have a round in the chamber.
Re: To chamber or not to chamber
Dog pile! lol
Chamber
In a high stress situation, you may not have the wits or time to work the slide.
Chamber
In a high stress situation, you may not have the wits or time to work the slide.
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Re: To chamber or not to chamber
Dogpile indeed.
Chamber.
Chamber.
IANAL, YMMV, ITEOTWAWKI and all that.
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Re: To chamber or not to chamber
Congrats,Def Yes Chamber a round. I have Xds great guns that won't go off unless you put your finger on the trigger. Of course you know this should never happen unless you are ready to shoot. You will chamber it's just that you are new and nervous. Totally understand. Take care great job carry at all times.
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Re: To chamber or not to chamber
First congratulations on getting your CHL. I am fairly new to CHL, and I was nervous about carrying with a round chambered. My daily carry is a Kel-Tec p3at that I pocket carry in a holster. When I started carrying, I did not carry chambered, I figured I would have time to chamber one. About a month ago, two couples were robbed at gun point next to the building I work at. I got to see the footage of the car pulling up, and the guys jumping out. I am not certain I could have had my gun out of my pocket fast enough, let alone taking time to chamber a round. Since then I have been carrying with one chambered. Like others said, make sure the trigger is covered, and practice drawing while keeping your finger off the trigger until you have brought it up.
On a side note, how is carrying the XDm IWB? My incredible family surprised be with a new XDm 9mm 4.5 for fathers day , and I am considering getting an IWB holster for it.
On a side note, how is carrying the XDm IWB? My incredible family surprised be with a new XDm 9mm 4.5 for fathers day , and I am considering getting an IWB holster for it.
Re: To chamber or not to chamber
Chambered! However, any gun (even it has a safety IMO), must be in a holster and you must learn how to unholster and reholster without touching the trigger or snagging the trigger on anything.
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Re: To chamber or not to chamber
been carrying for years and I carry in condition 1
In order to have maximum effectiveness as a safety/protection device you must carry one in the chamber.
In order for me to feel safe, I want a thumb safety. So, I only carry guns with thumb safetys. (I carry a Taurus 24/7 Pro .45)
I have thought long and hard about switching to the XDm with thumb safety (only in some 9mm models i understand), but I don't want to downgrade to 9mm because i subscribe to the "carry the largest caliber you can comfortably shoot" school of thought.
If you're comfortable carrying one in the pipe w/o a thumb safety then by all means do it. I'm not comfortable with that, but that's just my comfort zone.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeff_Cooper" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;Condition Four: Chamber empty, no magazine, hammer down.
Condition Three: Chamber empty, full magazine in place, hammer down.
Condition Two: A round chambered, full magazine in place, hammer down.
Condition One: A round chambered, full magazine in place, hammer cocked, safety on.
Condition Zero: A round chambered, full magazine in place, hammer cocked, safety off.
In order to have maximum effectiveness as a safety/protection device you must carry one in the chamber.
In order for me to feel safe, I want a thumb safety. So, I only carry guns with thumb safetys. (I carry a Taurus 24/7 Pro .45)
I have thought long and hard about switching to the XDm with thumb safety (only in some 9mm models i understand), but I don't want to downgrade to 9mm because i subscribe to the "carry the largest caliber you can comfortably shoot" school of thought.
If you're comfortable carrying one in the pipe w/o a thumb safety then by all means do it. I'm not comfortable with that, but that's just my comfort zone.
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Re: To chamber or not to chamber
Chamber.
P.S. Your XD has a couple of external safeties: a grip safety (the gun won't fire unless you're holding the grip) and a trigger safety (the gun won't fire unless the trigger is pulled). You also have the safety between your ears as well as a fairly significant trigger pull. A safety exists to prevent a firearm from discharging when you don't intend for it to discharge (dropped, bumped, jostled, caught on something, etc.). . . it's not for disabling the gun totally like a trigger lock.
I'll echo those who are recommending a good holster that retains it shape to allow one-handed reholstering and covers the trigger.
As always, know your main firearm safety rules:
1. All firearms are always loaded.
2. Always keep a firearm pointed in a safe direction.
3. Keep your finger off the trigger until you are ready to shoot.
4. Always be sure of your target and know what is behind it along the bullet's trajectory.
I guess that P.S. turned into a M.S. by the time I was done typing.
P.S. Your XD has a couple of external safeties: a grip safety (the gun won't fire unless you're holding the grip) and a trigger safety (the gun won't fire unless the trigger is pulled). You also have the safety between your ears as well as a fairly significant trigger pull. A safety exists to prevent a firearm from discharging when you don't intend for it to discharge (dropped, bumped, jostled, caught on something, etc.). . . it's not for disabling the gun totally like a trigger lock.
I'll echo those who are recommending a good holster that retains it shape to allow one-handed reholstering and covers the trigger.
As always, know your main firearm safety rules:
1. All firearms are always loaded.
2. Always keep a firearm pointed in a safe direction.
3. Keep your finger off the trigger until you are ready to shoot.
4. Always be sure of your target and know what is behind it along the bullet's trajectory.
I guess that P.S. turned into a M.S. by the time I was done typing.
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Re: To chamber or not to chamber
I don't anticipate a fire in my house, but all my fire extinguishers are loaded and ready to discharge. Chamber!
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Re: To chamber or not to chamber
I dont see why one would carry a handgun and not have a round chambered. I think its more of a piece of mind thing as some think their gun is going to just magically discharge a round. I use to feel that way when I was new to carrying.
Re: To chamber or not to chamber
+1 for chambering a round if you have time chamber a round while being mugged then either you are crazy fast or they are really really slow, but seeing how that USUALLY isnt the case (you might be special who knows) carry it chambered, i carry my 1911 cocked and locked all the time, or even my kahr pm45 with on in the chamber and not worry about it