Hello all, here is today's article posted on TheArmoryLife.com. It is titled “Why I Want My Gun to Fail” and can be found at https://www.thearmorylife.com/why-i-want-my-gun-to-fail/.



We would do sessions where someone else loaded your mag.When I was on my church's security team they paid for professional training for us.
Every training session included malfunction drills.
The trainer would have somebody else load our magazine and put dummy rounds in it.
We would through the course of Fire and the dummy rounds would simulate a malfunction and we'd have to clear the malfunction. Sometimes the guy would put two or three dummy rounds in a row in your gun.
It was good training except you knew a malfunction was coming but it was still good practice.
At some point during the series of classes I decided not to top off my magazine between courses of fire. I just reloaded during the course when the magazine was empty.
I think that was good practice too
Just curious which revolver do you use? Can you share how you manipulate a revolver left handed better than say a modern semi auto with ambidextrous controls. I know S&W has a hammerless snubby that has the release lever where the hammer would be. That seems made for leftysBeing left handed, all of my handguns are revolvers.
The slingshot method is grabbing the back of the side and puling it rearward then letting it go, like you were shooting a slingshot, vs putting your hand over the top and pulling it backGood article and it actually covered a couple of "malfunctions" I'd had in the past. Both self inflicted by myself.The question I have is what does the term "Slingshot method" mean? It's used in the article a few times and I'm not sure if it's somethingI already do as a fix or not when needed, and it's just verbiage. Appreciate any answers.
Thank you, I appreciate it. I've done this method just didn't know the verbiage.The slingshot method is grabbing the back of the side and puling it rearward then letting it go, like you were shooting a slingshot, vs putting your hand over the top and pulling it back
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