I'm finding alot of people have alot of cool stuff. So much stuff so little time.New here?
DoggyDaddy always finds the cool stuff.
I bet he even has a Mauser in 30-06 with furniture that looks like brindle that's not for sale.
Referring only to white males I think you're close. Snubby revolves in a Milt Sparks holster for the old guys, 1911's after that and then plastic guns for the under 60 crowd.there are certain brands or gun types that different age groups seem to carry. Guys in their 60’s..
You need to try a aluminum frame commander not as light as plastic but close and way more satisfying in hand.I have some 1911s and probably like shooting better than the other choices but have been carrying an H&K most of the time. It is plastic so it is lighter but I still have a hammer to avoid getting the Glock leg.
I’m a lefty. That’s why I stuck to revolvers for so longYou forgot one.
4. Those that tried 1911s, but they're lefties, so brass always ejected into their faces, which resulted in them giving up on pistols that need custom work right out of the box just to make them carryable.
That’s pretty.You don't have to have plastic on your AR...
This is what I did with my INGO lower.
View attachment 172404
Not to hijack thread, but did you buy the Judge over the SW Governor or buy before SW Gov was available? Thoughts on your Judge??and a Taurus Judge.
If you can touch the hammer it would do about the same, when I carried a pistol with a hammer I would put my thumb on the hammer when holstering. If you feel the hammer start to move somethings wrong. With a striker fired or concealed hammers you can't do that.Would striker fired and concealed hammers have the same drawbacks? Such that lack of external access to the hammer would be considered more/less/equal to striker fired guns? I ask because my guns with hammers are shrouded. I can touch the hammer kinda.
Would striker fired and concealed hammers have the same drawbacks? Such that lack of external access to the hammer would be considered more/less/equal to striker fired guns? I ask because my guns with hammers are shrouded. I can touch the hammer kinda.
And here I was more worried about my hand getting hairy. Dirty Harry.Keep touching it and you could go blind.
Man that just ain’t true brother.You forgot one.
4. Those that tried 1911s, but they're lefties, so brass always ejected into their faces, which resulted in them giving up on pistols that need custom work right out of the box just to make them carryable.
Is it a regional thing or is it even real? Just seems in my little corner of the world that there are certain brands or gun types that different age groups seem to carry. Guys in their 60’s.. 1911. 70’s, almost always a revolver. 50’s 1911 or sig, 40’s Glock, 30’s lotta shields and glocks, 20’s I actually don’t know. Is it just the ppl I know or is it pretty universal? Or am I wrong completely?