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December 16, 2022, 06:23 PM | #51 |
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Glad (albeit a little surprised) that you and your brother received a refund.
It wouldn't be surprising the instructor was, indeed, outside his comfort and experience zone. It happens. It used to be that LE instructors were well versed and experienced in working with folks using both revolvers and pistols. Sometimes it was as simple as knowing how to adjust round counts for shot strings and total scoring for 5/6rd revolver users in courses-of-fire where others were using higher capacity pistols. Other times it was making sure the revolver shooters weren't standing so their revolvers ended up sweeping others (if standing in a 'line'). Nothing difficult. In the waning days of revolver courses instructors had to be familiar with shooters reloading from speedloaders, speedstrips, using dump pouches, single or double (top off) belt loops, or even loose rounds from pockets (sometimes saved for a worse-case scenario when speedloaders might be exhausted earlier in the course-of-fire). I think the last LE class where I saw someone show up with a duty revolver was at the beginning of the 2000's, and it was a "tactical" shooting class. That guy worked for a medium-sized PD. The other cops stopped chiding him for carrying a large frame revolver once he demonstrated he could shoot and reload well enough to run at least with the better half of the folks in the class during all the ranges. The days of the revolver being a mainstream duty weapon may have come and gone, granted, but the sales of DA revolvers (especially snub revolvers) are still doing respectably well, and that's a market segment you'd think commercial self-defense instructors might consider worth exploring and supporting.
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December 18, 2022, 10:40 AM | #52 |
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funny you say that. when revolvers were the mainstay, revolver shooters complained about brass bouncing off of them on line from semi shooters. lol.
what comes around, goes around.
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December 18, 2022, 06:17 PM | #53 |
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Fudd's
How quickly some get to the us v. them mentality. I'd politely remind all of the Ben Franklin quote regards sticking together or hanging together.
I cannot speak for the mindset of the instructor in question. But..... I would think here is some merit in learning to "tactically reload" a revolver w/ loose rounds to bring the cylinder all up. Back in the day, we carried both speed loaders and 2x2 pouches for that very reason. If a cylinder was partially expended, and there was a lull in the action (went the theory) the spent cases were thumbnailed out and replaced with live ammo as necessary. We also practiced loading and indexing just two rounds. I've never worked with moon clips. I suppose a partially spent moon clip could be ejected/ retained and a full moon clip inserted as is done with a magazine in auto pistols for a tactical reload. One is then carrying about a partial moon clip which would have to be indexed to allow immediate use. Retaining spent cases seems foolish to me, and leaving live ammo behind for the sake of a full cylinder seems foolish as well. (assuminig a partial moon is ejected and not retained, and a fresh moon inserted). Call me a Fudd, but my train of thought is similar to driving a car. If one can drive, they should be able to drive both an automatic and manual transmission. If one is a revolver shooter than one should be able to manage clips, speed loaders and loose (2x2 and the like) rounds. |
December 18, 2022, 06:27 PM | #54 | ||
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Quote:
Quote:
I don't think in this case you're a fudd, but if your actions were the same as the instructor here I wouldn't consider you a good teacher. |
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December 19, 2022, 10:39 AM | #55 | |
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Back when IDPA could require a Tac Load, I kept some of those little two shot clips and a few Auto Rims handy for the occasion. |
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December 19, 2022, 06:39 PM | #56 | |
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Actually I was doing inventory the other day and found I still have a couple boxes of 230 45AR squirreled away.
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December 20, 2022, 01:58 AM | #57 |
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missing
I didn't miss anything. I dislike labeling other segments of the shooting community and the divisions created by such labels in our sport whatever the context. "Fudds" and another derogatory phrase was used in another post in this thread and I reused the term, in hindsight perhaps not the best idea. I'm not the moderator, I likely should have just kept my digital mouth shut.
I agree that the instructor owed the revolver guy an explanation. I would also note that approaching the instructor after the event, rather than challenging or questioning him in front of the group was very tactful (not tactical ) . Whatever logic the leader may have had could certainly have been explained then. I'm pleased to hear the OP got a refund. As the story is relayed, the instructor sounds incompetent. I also suspected that trying to stuff a partially expended moon clip in an empty revolver would be tedious. Relying solely on moon clips to charge a revolver seems unsound, hence my comments about single rounds and 2x2 loads. I'll add that in the few years I dabbled in informal IDPA, often at our little shoots, the guy to beat was a revolver shooter, and frequently, the most accurate shooter of the day was another guy with a M10 .38. |
December 20, 2022, 07:20 AM | #58 |
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Last CCW class I did was with a new instructor who insisted on "training" everyone. It was actually quite well done.
One guy was using a wheel gun and was obviously a pretty new shooter with a relatively new gun. Add that to the nervousness of shooting while instructors and ten other students were watching and it was, well, tedious. Nobody complained though. We just watched and the guy kept working his way through it. He didn't have speed loaders so he was dumping a handful of rounds on the table and loading them all one by one. By the end of the day, the guy was actually pretty good at it and was loading and shooting about three times faster than he had started. I was impressed. He did well and had every reason to be happy about it although he did say that he was going to go get an auto loader pistol. Nobody complained or criticized except himself. --Wag--
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December 20, 2022, 02:11 PM | #59 | |
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I had an interesting conversation the other day, with a retired Marine Gunny (mid 40's, FWIW). We were talking about CCW options and choices, and he mentioned that while he was a longtime pistol shooter, from his service career, he actually favored a revolver for serious personal use. He'd grown up using a DA revolver, and still preferred shooting one. He reflected that someone did have to have a frank assessment and understanding of their handgunning skills, and that they could make the optimal use of the inherently more limited round capacity of a revolver. Never knew that about him.
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Retired LE - firearms instructor & armorer Last edited by fastbolt; December 20, 2022 at 02:34 PM. |
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December 20, 2022, 02:38 PM | #60 |
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Very sad what happened to the OP, and sadder that there was not a reasonable explanation given.
I've had revolver shooters in my classes, I put them on the left side if right handed to afford a larger area of safe muzzle angle, and let them go at it. Totally unacceptable that an instructor would not let someone train with appropriate gear, and if needed, to provide the proper safety protocols to allow same. I did have a retired LEO come to class in mid 2020. Range was closed for CV and he needed to renew his LEOSA permit. He carried 2 J-frames. That was a first, but we made it work. At 70ish, he could still run all of the drills well under the time limits. Even the 10 round drills, he did great beating out some younger folks with wonder 9s. |
December 22, 2022, 11:40 AM | #61 | |
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... then the guy was an A-Hole. Chalk it up and let it go. Red |
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