- Location
- Kawartha Lakes
depends on the shooter ?......
I read that in an article of a magazine that reports on 1911 models (it may have been called "1911"). The guy who wrote the article was debating the pluses and minuses of 9mm vs .45 cal and was describing how regs are to carry condition 3, which he didn't think was a particularly good idea. The guy was apparently a pistol trainer for the us military with a rank of something-sgt. I can't give the source for sure, but a little research might come up with something.
If you say it says that in the army training manual, then I won't argue with it.
i'd like to see that source, if you have it- your sidearm is ALWAYS condition 1 unless you're at the rear- and it makes sense b/c if your primary goes mechanical for whatever reason, you TRANSITION to the sidearm automatically until you can get out of the situation and get the primary fixed- now that applied to the 1911, and it's right in the manual
"the m1911a1 shall be carried AT ALL TIMESwith a round in the chamber and the HAMMER in the FULLY COCKED position, with the SAFETY applied- it then goes on about how to draw from the m7 holster, etc
condition 3 makes no sense on the battlefield
That is why I love DA/SA Sigs. Round in the chamber, safety on or off, decocked so your first pull is DA and the rest of SA. NICE! No need to carry a hammerback chamber loaded pistol. I know either can be safe if the user trains, and uses quality goods, but the DA/SA action was pretty much invented to address some peoples (mine included) discomfort with the idea of carrying cocked and locked with a single action hair trigger.
**Not that it matters because I'm only an internet warrior, not a real one!![]()



























