AcridSaint
New member
That's exactly what we have to say. There are too many circumstances where you may have to reach over the slide and rack it to charge a weapon. If you always work on safely performing that action you will be better off in any situation.
You don't buy that you'll lose fine motor skills - OK, that's your choice. I do buy it, even under minimal stress you start doing strange things with a weapon. Yes, you can train yourself to overcome this through muscle memory, but then how well are you trained when clearing a malfunction under stress? If you're practicing the same way every time and doing it safely, you are giving yourself a better chance at surviving and being safe. You must develop safe handling habits with this technique if you are going to use a firearm defensively, period.
What do you do with your slide release when a magazine fails to lock the slide? What do you do on a Glock that slams the slide home while you're inserting a magazine? How do you clear a malfunction? All of these things require you to operate the weapon safely with just one hand on the grip. If you cannot operate the weapon safely performing these actions then you have no business operating it at all unless under supervision.
If this is the one skill that you believe is most probable to cause an accident, why neglect it until you really need it when you have an opportunity to safely practice it every time you charge the weapon?
You don't buy that you'll lose fine motor skills - OK, that's your choice. I do buy it, even under minimal stress you start doing strange things with a weapon. Yes, you can train yourself to overcome this through muscle memory, but then how well are you trained when clearing a malfunction under stress? If you're practicing the same way every time and doing it safely, you are giving yourself a better chance at surviving and being safe. You must develop safe handling habits with this technique if you are going to use a firearm defensively, period.
What do you do with your slide release when a magazine fails to lock the slide? What do you do on a Glock that slams the slide home while you're inserting a magazine? How do you clear a malfunction? All of these things require you to operate the weapon safely with just one hand on the grip. If you cannot operate the weapon safely performing these actions then you have no business operating it at all unless under supervision.
If this is the one skill that you believe is most probable to cause an accident, why neglect it until you really need it when you have an opportunity to safely practice it every time you charge the weapon?