Re: Carry what you want, calibre isn't that important
Very interesting thread.
"I've sold far more handguns for concealed carry, than I've sold handguns that are being carried." True and important. Whereas I would come down on the side of those that would say "Thank God" a majority of permit holders don't actually carry, I do think that many permit holders are "over" gunned. So much so that they quickly choose to leave their arms at home.
As to the "article," if that translates to "if you don't carry because your tired of dragging around heavy metal, carry a smaller, lighter firearm" and that translates to a smaller caliber, well, I agree with that as well. I am always astonished at the number of people that buy full boat .45 autos that, with the reliability of a rain dance, are the equivalent of hiding a brick on their person. I'm equally amazed at those that carry pistols with high teen round counts. I am not talking about those that are constantly stepping out with the responsibility to put themselves in harms way, I am talking about the passive permit carrier.
I remember that starting about 20 years ago there was quite a bit of dialog on what factual data could be distilled out of concealed carry incidents that resulted in the discharge of a handgun. The thought was, at that time, that the best way to prepare was to study the actual "requirements" based on actual "incident" use. At that time the data was split between two classes of Police carry, being concealed and open. Either of those classes where at much higher risk of drawing and firing than any profile found with private citizens with permits. Remember that.
Going into the analysis, the general thought was that 1-3 rounds were fired, total, between a party of two. In other words, approx 2 taps and the "event" ended. That belief had been pretty well taken as fact for years.
And then....the things changed. Intentional rounds where seen as moving up to six. As this was pre 1994, that meant a full revolver emptied (the majority of incidents) or an average of three between two parties if there was a gun fight. So, folks trained for that and quick reload training was adopted. All, by the way, within less than 10 feet. Then? The autoloaders came out and everything changed. Round count went up 25% to an average of 8-9 rounds still representing either one person dumping, or approx even split between two parties, or 4 rounds. And, today, that amount seems to still be a rough average, one person emptying...or two people with an average 4 rounds fired. By the way accuracy went down almost 50%.
So where does that leave us? Well, a vast majority of "incidents" within 10 feet, 4-5 rounds, the vast majority there was absolutely no sight alignment, a majority had their weapon in hand long before discharge as in "quick-draw" was rare, all happening in under a minute. And all these events happening rarely, very rarely.
My thought is to carry a heavy caliber, in the smallest, most reliable pistol possible, train to draw slowly and fire without using sites, double tap twice quickly, at a target at 10 feet....and do that until it is a natural, thoughtful process. Small handgun good, small caliber >.38 good, small target good, small distance good.