Cheap WWB @ 10 yds. off the hood of my truck with a folded up towel for a rest.
3/4" group outside to outside. Five rounds from each mag. (10 shot group not 5). Honest to goodness!

Moderator: carlson1
Yeah, i was shocked how accurate the little Kimber was. I wont group tight but at 25yds i can hit a 8" circle freehand everytime. I am sure a better shooter could group it a lot tighter.flintknapper wrote:Just in case anyone thinks a 3" gun can't be accurate. This target is from the first time out with this little rascal.
Cheap WWB @ 10 yds. off the hood of my truck with a folded up towel for a rest.
3/4" group outside to outside. Five rounds from each mag. (10 shot group not 5). Honest to goodness!
Cocked and locked is "Condition One-and-Only." I'm with Col. Cooper, Clint Smith, John Farnam, and others on this.rx9790 wrote:I dont carry one in the chamber 99% of the time anyway. If i know I am going into a possibly bad place or situation then i cock and lock it. I also switch to a Commander model with full hammer. As long as it is pointed in a safe direction why would lowering the hammer be unsafe?
I train with it both drawing C&L (IDPA is always C&L) and thumbing the trigger so hopefully if needed training will kick in. I know others may disagree but I still prefer hammer down on a live round. I just feel safer and thumbing the trigger or safety, in my case, is about the same time. I have lowered hammers thousands of times probably over the years and had 1 ND. It was on a DE .50 no less, slippery little hammer and sweaty hand. But years of pointing in a safe direction made a big hole in the ground 5 feet away.Skiprr wrote:Condition Two is chamber loaded, hammer down. On a 1911, this requires you to cock the hammer with your thumb before firing. Not a good defensive tactic because it takes extra time and it necessitates you employ a significant degree of fine-motor dexterity under stress.rx9790 wrote:I dont carry one in the chamber 99% of the time anyway. If i know I am going into a possibly bad place or situation then i cock and lock it. I also switch to a Commander model with full hammer. As long as it is pointed in a safe direction why would lowering the hammer be unsafe?
all the mechanical safeties of the firearm.
cbr600 wrote:If one wishes to carry with the hammer down, there are a number of fine DA pistols on the market.
Because it's always possible to make a mistake while doing this and light off a round.rx9790 wrote:I dont carry one in the chamber 99% of the time anyway. If i know I am going into a possibly bad place or situation then i cock and lock it. I also switch to a Commander model with full hammer. As long as it is pointed in a safe direction why would lowering the hammer be unsafe?
striker55 wrote:flintknapper, thanks for the pictures of the books, going to read the concealed handgun manual.