police service revolver

xlq771

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Just out of curiosity, are there any peace officers in Canada that still carry 4 inch .38 Special revolvers? Last time I saw one in an officer's holster was about 10 years ago, by a railway constable.
 
Really can't think of any police services that still use revolvers, and saw a lot of different police services in Toronto during the G20. Can't remember the last time I saw any kind of officer carrying anything other than semi.
 
I was just thinking the other day about the cross draw flap holster that I was issued to carry my S&W revolver in. I have not seen a revolver in use in a long time.

You see the argument was that we needed the pistols because a magazine holds more than a cylinder and is easier to reload. When we got our pistols we had to turn in our revolvers.
 
Both Armored Car companies: Group 4 Securicor and Brinks carry the Smith and Wesson Model 10 here in Canada.

They are upgrading, slowly. In some parts of Ontario, Securicor has started the switch to the Smith and Wesson M&P 40.cal.
 
I shot a model 10 before there a really good gun i like there new 8 shot tactical one to.
 
Both Armored Car companies: Group 4 Securicor and Brinks carry the Smith and Wesson Model 10 here in Canada.

They are upgrading, slowly. In some parts of Ontario, Securicor has started the switch to the Smith and Wesson M&P 40.cal.

They aren't peace officers, but yes. I know somebody that worked for Brinks up until earlier this year and carried a S&W .38. Brinks has already started upgrading to the M&P .40 also from what I hear.
 
There are a bunch of Brinks guys that come to our range to practise and qualify and they all shoot revolvers... Dont know what kind they are but they are do not look like shorties.. but i am not sure..

RDG
 
... Changing Times and changing Tastes spelt the end of the Revolver in Police Circles. Personally, I never felt "under gunned", with, either the 5" or the 2" Model 10, once the issue Ammunition was changed, to the so called, FBI Load. The velocities were for practical purposes, with the +p loading, low end 357 Magnum. And they performed very well indeed. ..... David K
 
prettu sure no revolvers remain in law enforcement circles here in canada...dont know about the states. the type of handguns issued to officers is what the force decides, not the officer. Down south the officer has a choice in certain depts
 
I was just thinking the other day about the cross draw flap holster that I was issued to carry my S&W revolver in. I have not seen a revolver in use in a long time.

You see the argument was that we needed the pistols because a magazine holds more than a cylinder and is easier to reload. When we got our pistols we had to turn in our revolvers.

I don't know how many times when running I had to stop and pick mine off the pavement :)
 
prettu sure no revolvers remain in law enforcement circles here in canada...dont know about the states. the type of handguns issued to officers is what the force decides, not the officer. Down south the officer has a choice in certain depts
The only large city police force in North America via rumour I've heard, that officers had the choice of a revolver or pistol, after the department issued 9mm pistols was in NYC.
IIRC, the older serving officers who started with the Model 10s, were given a grandfather option, to continue to carry thier Model 10s on duty, instead of the 9mm that became standard issue at that time in 1993.
As these older NYPD officers retire, by definition so do thier sixguns.
 
The only large city police force in North America via rumour I've heard, that officers had the choice of a revolver or pistol, after the department issued 9mm pistols was in NYC.
IIRC, the older serving officers who started with the Model 10s, were given a grandfather option, to continue to carry thier Model 10s on duty, instead of the 9mm that became standard issue at that time in 1993.
As these older NYPD officers retire, by definition so do thier sixguns.

In O'Hare airport a couple of months back, I saw a Chicago PD officer carrying a revolver. I remember thinking it was strange. He was an older fellow...
 
One of the more insightful discussions of police sidearm choices that I have ever seen, back in the day when police forces were in the middle of converting from six-shooters to large capacity semi's, talked about the round count of officer-involved shootings.

With revolver-armed police, the round count typically is 2 or 3 rounds, or else 7. With semi auto armed officers, it was frequently the same two or three rounds to a stopping hit, or else the whole 13, 15, 17 19 or whatever was in the mag and the one in the pipe, plus one.

The explanation is simple. Either the gun comes out and a sight picture is taken and the trigger pressed, and hits happen, or the gun comes out, thrust towards the suspect, the trigger jerked until the noises stop, and during the reload, the officer, if still standing, remembers things like the sights on the end of his piece, and to press, not jerk the trigger. Me, I always would have rather only spent a couple of seconds wasting six rounds, than having to suffer through incoming fire while I emptied a 19 round mag. Lousy logic for weapon selection I know, but, it is hard to deny human frailty.

Watch modern trained officers wildly empty their self-loader when taken by surprise. As a private citizen caught in the wrong place, I have always been in favor of a fecal storm of six un-aimed rounds loosed in my communty, than twenty.
 
I was down in Nevada last year and was pulled over at some make shift road block. The officers were all carrying revolvers. Not sure what kind but probably something in .357 Mag.
 
"With revolver-armed police, the round count typically is 2 or 3 rounds, or else 7. With semi auto armed officers, it was frequently the same two or three rounds to a stopping hit, or else the whole 13, 15, 17 19 or whatever was in the mag and the one in the pipe, plus one. "

Yeah; There was a cop in London Ontario who fired 19 rounds a couple of months ago. He was chasing an unarmed suspect through a residential area. He put 19 holes in various houses, fences, decks, and sheds.

Of course he wasn't charged with unsafe handling of a firearm.
 
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