No. I was saying that if you have a DA/SA pistol and you carry it cocked, you're crazy. A 1911 (or any pistol) that has a safety should be carried cocked, right? Forgot about the Glocks.sjfcontrol wrote:Well, I know the Glocks can't be cocked -- no hammer. Unless by cocked, you mean carrying with one in the chamber. And people carry modern semi-autos with one in the pipe all the time. That's the way I carry my XD-9, also striker-fired like the Glocks. And I swear I've seen officers carrying their SA guns with hammer cocked -- presumably with the safety on. So either we are talking about different things, or I disagree with the above highlighted statement. Are you saying you carry such that you'd have to rack the slide before shooting?baldeagle wrote: According to this police officers forum:AFAIK, all those guns can be cocked. But you'd be an idiot to holster a cocked modern semi-automatic.ON DUTY
S&W 5946
Glock 19
Sigarms P226 DAO
OFF DUTY
Glock 26
S&W 3914
Sigarms P239
S&W 3953 TSW
S&W 640 .38
The Kahr K9 is no longer authorized although there are around 7,000 in the field
There's nothing wrong with a DAO or a heavy trigger pull if you practice regularly. If you don't practice regularly, there's a lot wrong with it.
When I practice with both of my Sigs (P226 9mm and P239 .357 Sig), I always start every magazine as double action. After all, if I'm in a bad situation and have to pull my weapon, the first shot is going to be double action. I'd better be used to it and able to shoot accurately, or the first shot is not only a complete waste but a danger to bystanders.
Sorry for the confusion.