Re: on duty side arm
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: J-Ham</div><div class="ubbcode-body">than any regimented competition where you basically learn the stages and practice them. Just giving my opinion, not trying to start a shit-storm. </div></div>
USPSA, and more correctly, IPSC in general is not a "regimented competition" at all. It's a freestyle game where no two stages, besides standards and classifiers, are ever the same.
We certainly do not learn the stages and practice them, not basically and not at all. Your "opinion" is ignorant, and it is obvious from thinking that USPSA is some sort of game of muscle memory rather than skill.
It is one of the most basic cornerstones of practical shooting that it is freestyle, up to the shooter to solve any way he sees fit, subject only to the restrictions in the stage briefing that are written by the stage designer.
And just for the record (since someone did mention it), although I am a fan of the 1911, I compete with and shoot any gun that has a consistent trigger pull from the first shot to the last. As such, my safe contains striker fired and single action pistols, and while I am not indifferent to trigger choice between those two, whether it's for duty, competition, or otherwise, I advocate for guns that have a consistent trigger pull because it is my personal philosophy that teaching two trigger pulls is much closer to impossible than most users of DA/SA pistols are willing to recognize.
If I had to fill a duty holster, I would gladly fill it with any quality pistol that fit that criteria--one trigger from first shot to last. Skilled pistol shooters, especially those who have fired under the stress of classes, drills, and competition recognize the importance of this consistency that allows a person to most effectively control his firearm.
DA/SA is a compromise that I would not willingly make. Can I probably shoot a DA/SA better than most people? Sure. But it's not my choice because I believe that DA/SA is a detriment to the consistency that brings proficiency, and it is that proficiency that will save your life in a fight, whereas magic bullets and fancier firearms are a mere luxury in the same circumstance.