Hello all, here is today's article posted on TheArmoryLife.com. It is titled “1911 Carry Conditions Explained” and can be found at https://www.thearmorylife.com/1911-carry-conditions-explained/.
Good article explaining the various conditions.Hello all, here is today's article posted on TheArmoryLife.com. It is titled “1911 Carry Conditions Explained” and can be found at https://www.thearmorylife.com/1911-carry-conditions-explained/.
I live and work medicine in Las Vegas. Luckily for him it was Reno. Better medicine there.About 50 yrs ago me and a buddy were out with our deer rifles getting ready for deer season. When he stopped to pull up his pants. He pulled his 1911 in 38super out of his holster and in doing so disengaged the safety and by mistake put his finger inside of the trigger guard and when he pulled his pants up he ended up in shooting himself in the right foot.
Ended up taking him to the hospital in Reno to have surgery done.
Well it was still a ride from Susanville, CA about 90 miles. First we went to the hospital there were they stopped the bleeding and cleaned it.I live and work medicine in Las Vegas. Luckily for him it was Reno. Better medicine there.
I had the great fortune of learning from the "master" in 1980 at Gunsite. I attended as an active duty police officer on my own dime. Following my completion of the 101 course I was able to convince my police chief to allow me to carry my Colt Combat Commander on duty and train the rest of the department in the function and carry of the 1911 45ACP. I have carried that same gun on duty and as an EDC for over 40 years. I always carry condition one and have never had an AD, nor did anyone on my department in the 21 years I served there. There is only one way to carry a self defense handgun that makes any sense and that is Condition 1.Hello all, here is today's article posted on TheArmoryLife.com. It is titled “1911 Carry Conditions Explained” and can be found at https://www.thearmorylife.com/1911-carry-conditions-explained/.
If you choose to carry in Condition 1, here's a tip:
Before buying a holster, ensure that it's properly designed to carry in Condition 1.
A couple years ago, I purchased a Galco leather shoulder rig (Galco Vertical Holster System VHS 4.0) for my SA Ronin 1911 .45. After treating & breaking it in properly, according to the instructions, I found that holstering the Ronin in Condition 1 was a PITA and I couldn't figure out why. It wouldn't seat properly and kept getting hung-up and required fidgeting it around to get it to seat properly. And most of the time, fighting it to seat properly also flipped the safety to off without me realizing it at first (in other words, Condition 5 mentioned in the article). Not an ideal situation.
So I called Galco support to ask what's going on and if I got a defective holster. They told me that the holster wasn't designed to carry a .45 in Condition 1. Condition 2 was the recommended carry method. A $200+ holster, made by one of the most famous & best holster-makers in the world...and it failed at this common carry method for a .45?
I was livid at wasting that much money on this holster and asked why this limitation wasn't mentioned in the sales literature/website, so customers would know before buying. No real answer from the rep...almost like they knew it was a D move to keep the issue a secret, but could only shrug their shoulders.
I'm in a CCW state and always carry. But now, I have to carry the .45 in Condition 2, until I can find another suitable shoulder rig that's designed for carrying in Condition 1. And my dissatisfaction with Galco means I'm unlikely to purchase another holster from them for my other pistols...unless by some magic, they see this post and offer me a properly redesigned shoulder rig.
Thank you for the advice & recommendations. I'll look into them. I'll also check them out on GunBroker, since I don't spend enough time there already...LOL.Galco isn't the company it used to be when I started carrying everyday for work in 1970. Your best bet nowadays is to find a true custom leather maker, pay a bit more and wait (unfortunately) for weeks or even months for the maker to complete the holster built the way you want.
Here's some of my favorites. Some of these have holsters in stock and ready to ship. You might find their holsters on ebay or gunbroker:
Grizzle Leather
Privateer Gun Leather
Nightengale Holsters
Overland Gun Leather
TT Gunleather
Bulman Gun Leather
Rafter-l Gun Leather
5 Shot Leather Holsters
Palmetto Leather
Rosen Holsters
Kramer Holsters
Sparks Holsters
Garrity Gun Leather
Prince Gun Leather
Nelson Holsters
40 years of carrying Condition 1, my prefered holster is a Bianchi Pistol Pocket (IWB) because of it's concealability with most light clothing. That being said the Yaqui slide and Galco D155WCD (speed slide (OWB) also work for me depending on my clothing choice. All three strong side carry as was my duty. Thousands of repetitions in drawing.Galco isn't the company it used to be when I started carrying everyday for work in 1970. Your best bet nowadays is to find a true custom leather maker, pay a bit more and wait (unfortunately) for weeks or even months for the maker to complete the holster built the way you want.
Here's some of my favorites. Some of these have holsters in stock and ready to ship. You might find their holsters on ebay or gunbroker:
Grizzle Leather
Privateer Gun Leather
Nightengale Holsters
Overland Gun Leather
TT Gunleather
Bulman Gun Leather
Rafter-l Gun Leather
5 Shot Leather Holsters
Palmetto Leather
Rosen Holsters
Kramer Holsters
Sparks Holsters
Garrity Gun Leather
Prince Gun Leather
Nelson Holsters
Never cared for the Yaqui-style.40 years of carrying Condition 1, my prefered holster is a Bianchi Pistol Pocket (IWB) because of it's concealability with most light clothing. That being said the Yaqui slide and Galco D155WCD (speed slide (OWB) also work for me depending on my clothing choice. All three strong side carry as was my duty. Thousands of repetitions in drawing.
There a plenty of similar style holsters out there, you just need to find one that works and train with and stay with it. Under stress you will always revert to the way you train/carry most. Shoulder holsters are good for portly individuals but require a special draw technique to keep from chasing it while drawing.