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She appears to throw back her left elbow as she... chambers a round.Revolver?
Okay, I just watched it several more times. I see now what you are talking about. The other woman obscures the purse, but right after the rear movement of her elbow we see her hand is on the bottom of the frame, not on top of the slide.
The video evidence is inconclusive, it could go either way, but I find it hard to believe a trained police professional would carry a firearm without a round in the chamber. Had we done that we would have been fired.
Then, in my opinion as a certified pistol instructor, a certified range safety officer, a certified DOJ firearms safety instructor, a certified law enforcement firearms instructor, I would implore neither you nor your wife carry at all. It would be better to just submit to whatever your assailant demands rather than try to defend yourself with an unloaded gun.All I can say is that if my wife carried a gun in her purse around our young children I would not allow it with a bullet in the chamber and no safety to be around our kids, whether she was a professional or not.
As far as I know the only pistol currently in production with a grip safety other than the 1911A1 is the Springfield XD. And that is not an actual safety, but is a squeeze cocker that cocks the firing pin so the pistol can be carried uncocked but just gripping it will cock it after being drawn.But do Glocks and other ACPs have the palm safety feature ?

Then, in my opinion as a certified pistol instructor, a certified range safety officer, a certified DOJ firearms safety instructor, a certified law enforcement firearms instructor, I would implore neither you nor your wife carry at all. It would be better to just submit to whatever your assailant demands rather than try to defend yourself with an unloaded gun.
I noted earlier, if for whatever reason you can't use your off hand, you won't be able to chamber a round. You will just be standing there holding an unloaded gun making yourself a target.
60% of all FTFs (Failure to Feed) happen when the first round is chambered manually. (Glocks are famous for this.)
And, of course, by drawing an unloaded pistol, which you cannot fire yet, causes the assailant to start firing at you with little or no regard for those around you including your own children and loved ones.
Many LEOs refuse to carry a duty pistol with a manual safety because they don't like the fact you have to do something before you can fire the first shot.
Gaston Glock designed the original Glock 17/19 for law enforcement which is the reason it has no manual safety. And Glocks (today mostly Glock 22s) make up around 70% of law enforcement agency issued or approved firearms.
Carrying a firearm that is not ready to shoot is very, very dangerous. You are better off with no firearm than you would be with a firearm that only makes you a soft target
When I was on the market for a carry pistol, Sig had just come out with the P250. I bought one of the very early examples and have liked it, but Sig Sauer let me down on all of the expansion and modularity that was supposed to rolled out over the next few years. They eventually gave up on the model and created the P320 to take its place.I like my Sig P320 better but wish I had held out for the Sig P365 which is next on my list.
And these:Thank you. That’s a nice feature. Perfect for draw and fire.
I can understand your need to deflect from the subject at hand. The point remains. Carrying an unloaded gun is dangerous. And all the nonsense of leaving a loaded gun in reach of children is just that, nonsense. No responsible gun owner would leave a firearm where a child could access it, loaded or not.Thanks for your opinion, but basic Critical Thinking Skills teach to recognize that one throwing out his credentials doesn’t make his argument logically true as well as to recognize the rhetoric of condescending statements and slippery slope fallacies.
Ooops: XD. Thanks for the correction. The picture is even the XD! Do I get credit for half right?And these:
I'll be honest, I scrolled right past the pic and didn't even notice.Ooops: XD. Thanks for the correction. The picture is even the XD! Do I get credit for half right?![]()
I can understand your need to deflect from the subject at hand.
The point remains. Carrying an unloaded gun is dangerous. And all the nonsense of leaving a loaded gun in reach of children is just that, nonsense. No responsible gun owner would leave a firearm where a child could access it, loaded or not.
If your wife is leaving her purse with a gun in it near a child it is time to have a long and serious discussion with her about gun safety and the worth of that child's life.
The issue is loaded chamber. I always advise against a woman putting a firearm in a purse. That's what holsters are for. Now, do you want to get back to the topic or are you done?A purse isn’t attached to a woman,
If the firearm owner is not a responsible person they have no business owning or carrying a firearm.without responsible consideration
The issue is loaded chamber. I always advise against a woman putting a firearm in a purse. That's what holsters are for. Now, do you want to get back to the topic or are you done?
Yes, I am familiar with a couple different styles. But they all have the same problem. Anytime a woman in a place with a lot of foot traffic she is in danger of a purse-snatcher.T, keep in mind there are purses that are made to double as holsters.

I really have no complaints. At first I thought the slide was pretty darn stiff but it's either loosened up or I've gotten used to it. The springs in the magazines are pretty tight too so putting in the last bullet by hand was kind of joke but I'm using a device now to load. Guess I'd say its a tight gun. Been flawless.When I was on the market for a carry pistol, Sig had just come out with the P250. I bought one of the very early examples and have liked it, but Sig Sauer let me down on all of the expansion and modularity that was supposed to rolled out over the next few years. They eventually gave up on the model and created the P320 to take its place.
I've been thinking about trading the P250 toward a new P320. Do you have any issues with it? Any annoying issues like trouble chambering a round with a completely full magazine?
) in less space than any other 10 round clip.