Glenn E. Meyer
New member
Interesting little test for moi. Been meaning to do this. Like a lot of folks, the gun that gets carried quite a bit is the SW 642 as compared to my bigger ones. Sometimes dress, just means that the pocket gun gets carried. I read recent bits by Clint Smith and Duane Thomas about J frames and small semis.
I recently ditched my PM9 for a Glock 26 (BTW - check out Kahr LH stuff for sale). I also have a 642. So this weekend, at two IDPA matches I used first the 26 and the next day, the 642.
What did I find out:
1. The 26 is easy as pie to shoot, I shot it equally as well (or badly as my usual G19). I like my 1911 best for matches but that wasn't the issue. The gun ran smoothly right out of the box.
2. The 642 - it was a hoot to shoot a match with it. Here's my take - for the first five shots at close and intermediate distances, I can shoot it quite well. Reloading is slow with speed loaders - that's par for the course. Some reloads I did well, some I fumbled as it is a tight gun to reload. Long shots - some I screwed it. On others - quite well - I managed to nail some small plates with one shot each - a miracle. Others took two.
I'm going to train more with the snubbie in a class in April.
Thus, I feel reasonable comfortable shooting each. The 642 is really set for the archetypal one mugger scenario. Modern ammo with it makes it reasonably powerful.
The G26 is a reasonable and shootable IWB gun with more rounds and quick reloads - if dress allows.
It was instructive to practice with the 642. I really did like my PM9 as a pocket gun and felt bad to ditch it. But it wasn't that reliable and I found it a hard draw from the pocket. Thus, I went back to the 642 as my main pocket gun.
It is shootable - I need a little more practice on the longer shots. I would also opine that IDPA should have another category (haha) - LGP - Little Guns in Pocket.
Thus, the Kel-tecs, Seecamps, J frames, etc. could have an official niche. Heck, even let in the Lorcins.
The typical IDPA scenario with 2 rounds per target made for a lot of reloading but that was good practice.
I had a blast - except for a damn charley horse in my hamstring on a kneeling stage so I had to shoot one handed while clutching my thigh and howling.
I recently ditched my PM9 for a Glock 26 (BTW - check out Kahr LH stuff for sale). I also have a 642. So this weekend, at two IDPA matches I used first the 26 and the next day, the 642.
What did I find out:
1. The 26 is easy as pie to shoot, I shot it equally as well (or badly as my usual G19). I like my 1911 best for matches but that wasn't the issue. The gun ran smoothly right out of the box.
2. The 642 - it was a hoot to shoot a match with it. Here's my take - for the first five shots at close and intermediate distances, I can shoot it quite well. Reloading is slow with speed loaders - that's par for the course. Some reloads I did well, some I fumbled as it is a tight gun to reload. Long shots - some I screwed it. On others - quite well - I managed to nail some small plates with one shot each - a miracle. Others took two.
I'm going to train more with the snubbie in a class in April.
Thus, I feel reasonable comfortable shooting each. The 642 is really set for the archetypal one mugger scenario. Modern ammo with it makes it reasonably powerful.
The G26 is a reasonable and shootable IWB gun with more rounds and quick reloads - if dress allows.
It was instructive to practice with the 642. I really did like my PM9 as a pocket gun and felt bad to ditch it. But it wasn't that reliable and I found it a hard draw from the pocket. Thus, I went back to the 642 as my main pocket gun.
It is shootable - I need a little more practice on the longer shots. I would also opine that IDPA should have another category (haha) - LGP - Little Guns in Pocket.
Thus, the Kel-tecs, Seecamps, J frames, etc. could have an official niche. Heck, even let in the Lorcins.
The typical IDPA scenario with 2 rounds per target made for a lot of reloading but that was good practice.
I had a blast - except for a damn charley horse in my hamstring on a kneeling stage so I had to shoot one handed while clutching my thigh and howling.