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The Range
Handgun Discussion
The Maggie!
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<blockquote data-quote="criticalbass" data-source="post: 1192972" data-attributes="member: 711"><p>Not a problem unless you give in to the temptation to pull the hammer back when you practice. DA is the way to shoot a revolver in a deal, and you'll shoot the way you practice if you do get into one. I couldn't have ground it off either . . .</p><p></p><p>As I recall, the LAPD, back when they used wheelguns, disabled the cocking sear on all their guns to keep officers from cocking them. Too many ADs from cocked hammers.</p><p></p><p>A friend of mine's husband taught her to always cock the hammer on her little .38 snub. She heard a noise recently, went into the back yard with the hammer back, and very nearly killed one of the bird dogs that had somehow escaped from its pen. She has some arthritis and the spur on that gun is not large. I have offered to do some retraining, and she's considering it. She did miss the dog, but not by much. CB</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="criticalbass, post: 1192972, member: 711"] Not a problem unless you give in to the temptation to pull the hammer back when you practice. DA is the way to shoot a revolver in a deal, and you'll shoot the way you practice if you do get into one. I couldn't have ground it off either . . . As I recall, the LAPD, back when they used wheelguns, disabled the cocking sear on all their guns to keep officers from cocking them. Too many ADs from cocked hammers. A friend of mine's husband taught her to always cock the hammer on her little .38 snub. She heard a noise recently, went into the back yard with the hammer back, and very nearly killed one of the bird dogs that had somehow escaped from its pen. She has some arthritis and the spur on that gun is not large. I have offered to do some retraining, and she's considering it. She did miss the dog, but not by much. CB [/QUOTE]
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