The fact it remains in service tells you more about how little reliance the pistol plays in the Army...
As to the draw with a safety applied this occurs every week by competitors shooting 1911's in CDP Division at IDPA events and by competitors in Standard Division in IPSC. From watching the top competitors I can tell you with certainty there is no time lost in swiping off a manual safety. From my own experience shooting my 1911's in competitions swiping the manual safety off and in my case on has no effect on the time to draw and shoot. ..
Assuming the US Army is in the same relative state the Canadian Army is as regards to those serving in the infantry the need for a safety is readily apparent probably more than the need for a fast draw...
Given the amount of stuff you are carrying while on patrol, I would think the latter would be almost impossible to achieve in any event.
What is clear is the requirements of the modern infantry are not exactly those encountered in the civilian marketplace.
A fast draw by the top shooters would be in the .5 to 1 second range I would think from concealment. I am pretty average type shooter who is in his salad years and I manage from concealment about a 1.4 - 1.60 draw for comparison. I'll let the young Turks argue over the times. I doubt there would be any way such a draw could be achieved when fully kitted out for one of your patrols.
My prayers go out to the UK soldier who was wounded in Ottawa. I hope they catch the bugger who shot him. The social scene in Ottawa in the early hours of the morning would seem to be the same as they are everywhere else these days.
Thank you for your kind words.
You are not the first person to comment on the pistol playing a limited role while in the Army, and how the Army doesn't actually need good pistols. In 2009, Andrew Leslie came out to my little outpost to rub elbows with the troops, in a town hall fashion. He was put on the spot by one of the lads who wanted to know when a new pistol would be forthcoming. Leslie had the audacity to claim in a room full of more than 100 soldiers that at the point in the war, 6 years in, 3 of which in southern Kandahar, "NOT A SINGLE ROUND HAD BEEN FIRED AT THE ENEMY FROM A 9MM BHP". I was shocked. Personal experience aside, anyone who is familiar with the mission knows that there isn't exactly a full investigation after every engagement, where the soldiers sit down, write a report, account for every round from every weapon system, and document the circumstances there of. Nothing in our reporting structure captures that kind of minutiae. At that point in our tour my battle group had been involved in over 200 engagements. We were the 7th rotation in the area, and the 12th in the country. There was no way anyone with integrity could make such a claim, least of all to a room full of guys walking the street everyday.
In any event, Pistols get used. No, they don't get used in combat often, but thats not the bottom line. When you NEED one, it has to work as quickly and certainly as humanly possible. We have great rifles, and as long as your rifle is running, your pistol should never see sunlight. A lot of guys are trained on rifle and pistol carry, but not all are trained on how to properly carry both simultaneously. Due to old mags, there is an unacceptably high occurrence of feeding stoppages. Anyone familiar knows to simply doom stomp any of the old mags into oblivion and get the new ones, but still there is a lack of confidence in that pistol that causes it to be used less often than what would be the case with something better.
Your top tier competitive shooter probably puts 10 times as many rounds down as a highly trained soldier, so its not really fair to compare one to other, but even amongst that crowd, once the learning curve is accounted for, I would wager a paycheck that regardless of who you are, any manual safety will slow you down a measurable amount. I don't care how many people are using a manual safety in a competition. The guys who win don't use them, unless they are mandatory.
I agree that army bean counters might think that the need for a safety is readily apparent and more important than a fast draw, but I will say it again. THe people that need a safety and the people that need a fast draw are two different groups of people, and I do not accept putting the lives of those who need a fast draw at risk for the benefit of those who need a safety. If you think someone actually NEEDs a safety, than I submit that what they actually need is a whistle.
Yes we carry a lot on patrol. Weight doesn't affect your ability to draw and fire, unless you are at the end of the patrol, at which point its not the weight, but the fatigue. +48 C doesn't help either. In training, with a full battleload, we timed ourselves for funzies, and the average among my team of lads, who I already indicated had better than average training, were scoring in the low 2s for a rifle shot, stoppage, and a transition to the pistol. Rifle up, rifle shot, ***CLICK***, ditch rifle, draw pistol, fire pistol 2.25-2.5. Regardless of whether that was 2 seconds or 20 seconds, if the manual safety adds 0.1 than that is a real cost, and while slim, could be the difference between winning and losing. The overwhelming consensus of my personal experience is that a manual safety slows you down. BHPs especially so, but every safety at least a little. Cognitively there is more going, physically there is more going on, mechanically there is more going on. Show me some scientific data and I will change my mind, but at this point I am certain of it.
As for the UK lad, it was a drive by. THey have a description of the vehicle. Ottawa police are pretty good, I am sure they will track him down. The bar that the shooting happened at is a pretty popular country bar in the area. I can't imagine what kind of altercation could have motivated someone to a drive by, but hopefully the details trickle out in the days weeks.
To be fair. The shooting wasn't actually in "Ottawa" and the place where it happened has no history of such occurrences.
Last time I checked, 60 seconds ago, Kanata was in Ottawa. And no, no one has been shot in front of THAT bar before. Ottawas homicide rate is quickly closing the gap with Toronto. I don't understand your point.