I tried to REP you, but I have to S P R E A D it around a little first !!!!!THATS WHY YOU....KEEP IT RACKED IN YOUR HOLSTER
I tried to REP you, but I have to S P R E A D it around a little first !!!!!THATS WHY YOU....KEEP IT RACKED IN YOUR HOLSTER
revolvers are not a begginers gun. J frames especially. that trigger has a huge learning curve. If she ever needs to reload, I can guarantee it it won't be in a hurry.
revolvers are not a begginers gun. J frames especially. that trigger has a huge learning curve. If she ever needs to reload, I can guarantee it it won't be in a hurry.
There. That's better.Get [STRIKE]a glock, FN, or M&p[/STRIKE] what she is comfortable with, Get a [STRIKE]crossbreed, comptac Minotaur, Kholster or similar[/STRIKE] holster that works with her carry choices and fits her comfortably.
Makes a pretty good argument for a revolver, then, doesn't it?If she isn't comfortable carrying a loaded round talk her out of carrying till she is. Their are hundred of videos out their of people getting killed/beat/robed, becuase they didn't learn their safeties, or they didn't get the pistol racked in time.
Is it 'your way or the highway' with everything or just firearm related choices?if she [STRIKE]insists on[/STRIKE] prefers a firearm using a manual safety, [STRIKE]talk her into a class that will teach her the limitations of manual safeties, and how to work around them.[/STRIKE], remember to focus some of the range time on creating the muscle memory of disengaging it.
Muscle memory is a IMHO a bad idea, teach her to think. Let her think through the process.