Monthly Archives: June 2012

Why-dex?

M&Pc-Two-Tone-1_smSo, presumably you are here because you have a gun or are thinking about buying a gun.  This is good.  You are taking steps in the right direction.  Welcome to The Magical World of Firearms Ownership, where the sun is always shining and butterflies and unicorns romp in the meadows.  (That’s right, I said “romp”. WHAT?).

Now we should to talk about how you are going to carry your gun.  First, you need to make sure that you are following all of the proper procedures for your state including obtaining a Concealed Carry Weapons License, if necessary.  Once you have that license, you’ll need a holster to carry your gun in.  There are many holster options available.  Not all holsters are ideal for all guns.  Some are better than others.  I’m assuming you are reading this because you are smart and you’re doing your research, which is exactly what you should do when you are looking to buy a holster.

If you’ve done any shopping at all for a holster so far, you’ve probably run into the word “Kydex”.  In case you are unfamiliar, Kydex is a thermoplastic sheet product. It has a number of industrial applications in fields like aviation, health care and mass transit.  It is also remarkably well suited for making holsters and knife sheaths due to its strength, durability and chemical and flame resistance.  Holster-makers also like the crisp detail achievable in the molding process both for the aesthetics and superior retention of the firearm.

Kydex also offers distinct advantages over a leather or nylon holster since it doesn’t deform or compress over time. This means that the shape of the holster won’t change, so you can be assured that your gun will always be where you it need it to be.  The rigidity of the material makes Kydex holsters good training tools also. You’ll get the same draw and re-holster every time, which can help you improve the consistency of your movements. Considering the retention properties and ease of use, if you’re going to be training aggressively or just moving around a lot with your gun, a well-made Kydex holster could be a good choice for you.  Additionally, Kydex quite is durable, making it a perfect choice for hard wear-and-tear activities.  And since it’s plastic, you can basically just hose it down with soap and water when you’re done.  This is a distinct advantage over other types of holsters, which may be difficult or impossible to clean.

The downside of Kydex is that it can become uncomfortable in certain positions or after a long period of time, since it is so inflexible.  This can be especially unpleasant during an extended car ride, when your holster and the car seat can engage each other in an epic fight to the death, in which your back and side will be the main casualties.

There is also the issue of body type to be considered.  A leather holster is going to conform to your individual shape as you wear it, but a Kydex holster will pretty much be the same shape forever.  There is a certain amount of flex in the plastic, especially if it’s made from a thinner sheet of Kydex like .08 or .06 thickness.  If you are wearing your holster on a heavy duty gun belt (which you should), when you tighten it up, your holster will flex slightly and snug down to your body.  However, it’s never really going to “break in” the way a leather holster would.  Mostly, this is a matter of personal preference and just getting the right tool for the job.

If you decide that you want to take the plunge and get yourself a Kydex holster, some of the big names you might want to check out are Raven Concealment Systems, Blade-Tech and Comp-Tac. These companies all make perfectly functional holsters, though personally, I don’t think they are the prettiest ladies at the ball.  Luckily, there’s been a flood of smaller companies that have recently cropped up to accommodate the demand for custom-made Kydex holsters with more of an eye towards design and comfort.  Some of my favorites are GunFightersInc., Sentry Gun Leather, MultiHolsters and PHLster.  In the interest of full disclosure, I should mention that I actually work for PHLster.  This means I am biased, but it also means I spend a lot of time around Kydex, talking about, testing and helping to design holsters.  I know the benefits and the disadvantages of carrying a Kydex holster.

Here are some things I think you should consider when shopping for a holster:

What are you planning on using the holster for?  Is it an every day carry holster or will you be using it just at the range or in your home?  If it’s going to be your EDC holster, can you wear it in a way that is comfortable, concealable and secure?

Is a Kydex holster the best bet for your particular firearm?  Since it is a relatively hard plastic, a Kydex holster can wear the finish on your gun over time.  Are you ok with that?  Personally, I run my M&Ps in Kydex all the time, but my Kimber Raptor has never seen the inside of a Kydex holster and never will.  In other words, if you’re looking for something to carry your amazingly gorgeous Ed Brown Custom 1911 in, I would pass on the Kydex.

And finally, if you are going to be ordering a custom holster, are you confident that you are getting what you want?  Oftentimes, when buying a custom holster you are ordering based solely on photos you’ve seen on a website.  If you have the opportunity to examine and try on some holsters in real life, do that first.  It will give you a better idea of what you want and make the ordering process much smoother.

Ask a lot of questions, even if they seem obvious.  I spend a lot of time at PHLster answering emails and I would much rather have 20+ email exchanges with you than send you a holster that you won’t be happy with.  Knowledge is paramount in the firearms community, whether it be about safety, training, gear or guns themselves.

If you have questions or want to talk to me more about holsters or Kydex or guns or unicorns, you can email me at rebeccaguns@gunnoob.com.  Also, check out PHLster.com for awesome stuff.  Happy holstering!


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TLaC: Safety Through Obscurity – Keeping Your Kids Safe…

 

badguyI used to work as a network administrator for a very large insurance company. Now, net admins for insurance companies have a particularly stressful job due to something called HIPAA. I’m not going to get into the details of what that is because it’s boring as hell. The short of it: “If even the smallest bit of customer data gets leaked or stolen, we will end you. Signed, The Government.” Essentially, it was our job to protect our company from its own users. We were good at it too.

I had a particularly awesome manager as well. Once in awhile, he would walk into our area, staple a $20 to the poster board and say “social engineering time!” At that point, it was a contest to see who could get the most people in the call center to give up their login info or customer data by the end of the day using a set of guidelines (call from outside number, don’t say ____, etc etc). Basically, doing the things that any run of the mill hacker or identity thief would do. It was quality control. It was a test to see which of our call center people paid attention to that section in training that said “if you give out your login info or customer data to unauthorized/unverified people you will be fired on the spot with no warning.” You’d be surprised how many people didn’t pay attention to that. At the same time, there’s a reason I don’t have my insurance with that company.

Anyway, the thing I learned from my time there is that it doesn’t take much to convince someone you’re trustworthy. Often times, I could just take a quick trip to their MySpace page (Facebook wasn’t very popular yet at the time) while I was talking to them and I could glean enough info to convince them that I worked on the next floor up. Mentalists use similar techniques. You’d be surprised how much someone will tell you about themselves without realizing that they’ve told you. Even something as simple as a lucky guess on a personal detail can put the other person at ease enough to trust you with whatever info you want from them.

But that’s not what I wanted to talk to you about today. I wanted to talk to you about keeping your children safe.

I constantly see these stickers that people put on the backs of their cars (almost always SUVs or Minivans). It’s a stick-figure diagram of that person’s family. I know you’ve seen them too. Have you ever really thought about them, though? Think about what they’re advertising to the world.

customfamilysmall

Let’s take a look at the example above. We can see that there are 4 members of the family plus 2 pets. The dad likes to build things, and the mother reads (or maybe works at a library?). The daughter plays soccer and the boy plays baseball. We don’t know the names of the parents but we do know the names of the kids and the pets. We also know the family’s last name.

Now imagine that some scumbag was watching a school and sees the young boy getting out of this car. The school day ends, he meets the kid leaving the school and says the following: “Hey, Peter! Your sister, Florence, was in a bad accident playing soccer and is at the hospital. Your dad asked me to check on Sebe and Tabby then pick you up and bring you to the hospital to meet them.”

Now imagine a kid’s thought process: “Well, I was always told not to talk to strangers but this guy knows my sister’s name and my pet’s names and my sister DOES play soccer. He must know our family pretty well!”

You’re probably sitting there thinking “my kid is smart enough to see through that”. I can tell you from my experience in IT that it has nothing to do with intelligence. Scams work on the brightest to the dimmest. It just depends on how convincing the scammer is and, believe me, they can be VERY convincing. If I were to have called up one of those customer service people with the equivalent amount of information above, I could get any information I needed from them with no problems at all. A kid isn’t going to fare much better. They still have an innocent and trusting view of the world.

So how do you protect them without destroying that innocent and trusting view of the world (before the world has the chance to do that for you)? For starters: scrape those damn stickers off your window. I know you’re proud of your family and you should be. Show that pride elsewhere. Even if you don’t have the names and hobbies on yours, enough information can be deduced from just a basic diagram. Do you really want to be saying “well, I know it makes it easier for someone to kidnap my child but I really like those stickers!”?

Also, and this is the big one, figure out a secret password. A word that you agree on as a family and that no one but your family would know. Something that wouldn’t be used in normal conversation but could be used as either an ok or a warning. If you ever do have to send someone to pick up your kid that your kid doesn’t know, tell them the password. Even police officers can convey the password. That way, your kid will know for sure that the person is legit. Instruct them never to go with someone that doesn’t know the password.

At the same time, if something is wrong, they should be taught that if you work it into a conversation in a specific way, it is a warning and they should run and call the police.

Ultimately, the concept of “stranger danger” is a good thing to teach. That concept falls apart when said stranger is really good at convincing people he’s not a stranger. Keeping your kids safe is a monumentally difficult task. Don’t make it easier for someone to endanger them.

 

Top image used under Creative Commons License from cometstarmoon.

 


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What’s a scout rifle and do I need one?

In the 1970s, Col. Jeff Cooper, a rifleman’s rifleman if there ever was one, pioneered the idea of a general purpose rifle that would work in a variety of roles from hunting to defense. The concept was dubbed “the scout rifle,” and Cooper refined it over the years until his death in 2006. Cooper believed in the “scout,” a man who “acted alone, not as a member of a team. By choice he did not fight, but he had to be an expert at the hit-and-run art of single combat. By choice he did not shoot, but if forced to shoot, he shot quickly, carefully, and as little a possible. ‘One round, one hit and then vanish!’ – that was his motto. He did not need an assault rifle. He needed a scout rifle.”

Cooper caption

So Cooper set out to create the perfect rifle for this man. Now, this isn’t ‘Nam, this is scout rifles… there are rules, rules so stringent that not even Ruger’s Gunsite Scout, designed with help from people at Gunsite who knew and worked with Jeff Cooper, lives up to Cooper’s vision. I’m not talking about the political “if it has a magazine, it’s an assault rifle,” kind of rule, either, where they’re deliberately vague. Cooper’s vision was specific for very specific reasons.

  • It’s a bolt-action rifle.
  • It’s ideal weight is 6.6 pounds, but can be as heavy as 7.7 pounds, and that’s with the scope and sling.
  • It’s a meter long or less.
  • It’s barrel should be about 19 inches.
  • It should have a low-powered, low-mounted, long eye relief scope placed forward of the action.
  • Ghost ring iron sights are not required, but are preferred.
  • It should have a fast loop up sling.
  • The preferred caliber is .308 Winchester, though other calibers can be used if more power is required. A .243 can be used if the shooter is frail, but .308 is considered the minimum for power.
  • It has to shoot a four-inch group at 200 meters.

Not so easy to find now, is it? Cooper’s requirements come for good reasons. A bolt-action rifle is typically lighter than a semi-auto and less prone to failures. It has to be light-weight because whoever’s using it is running through the wilderness with it for long periods of time. It needs to be short enough to not snag on brush as you’re walking, but the barrel has to be long enough to retain range and power. It should have iron sights as well as a scope because scopes break. It needs enough power to take out an unarmored target, human or animal, weighing in at 500 pounds. The sling should be able to support your arm during a shot, not just be a way to haul the weapon around. Bipods are okay, but Cooper felt they were almost useless in rough terrain and could become a dangerous crutch for a shooter to get addicted to.

A long-eye relief scope allows a shooter to hit a target at range while retaining their peripheral vision. (Okay, I know this is kind of a faux pas, but it’s the best way I can come up with to describe it. You know how when you’re playing Call of Duty on the X-Box, and you’re using a sniper rifle, and while you’re looking through the scope, some random asshole named HelloKitty@$$Face comes around the corner and tags you in the side of the head from like eight feet away because you couldn’t see him come up on you? That’s the reasoning behind the long eye relief scope. You can see the world around you and maintain situational awareness.)

snipercaption

Cooper was big on shooting with both eyes open, and with a low power scope mounted forward of the receiver, you can do that pretty well. It also makes it easier to load the weapon with a stripper clip, and you can hold the weapon around the receiver, the rifle’s center of gravity, when you’re hauling ass away from a bear big enough to laugh at .308. The downside is that it doesn’t do well in low-light conditions, and during sunrise and sunset you can get a glare off the glass that makes the scope useless.

So this is hardly just a rifle with a weird-looking scope. Cooper didn’t give a dump about making the rifle look nice. Function came before form, and yet the end results are pretty nice looking rifles. The Mannlicher Scout, a rifle Cooper approved of, has sleek lines and looks almost futuristic for a bolt-action rifle.

But should you get one of these general, all-purpose, do-anything, ass-kicking rifles designed by one of the most brilliant men in the firearms field since John Moses Browning descended from Heaven to present man with the 1911?

In a word, no.

In several words, allow me to explain. I’ve heard the scout rifle described as “a solution looking for a problem,” and unfortunately, in the modern world, that’s true. This is a frontiersman’s rifle. It’s a rifle you use when you don’t know what you’re going to shoot tomorrow, but it’s a pretty good bet you’re shooting something. On paper, that sounds great, but in the modern world, how many people live that life? What it excels at is doing everything “okay.” You can use it for hunting, but it’s not going to be as good as a regular hunting rifle. You can use it for defense, but it’s not going to be as good as an AR15.

Look, in the modern world, guns are like women’s shoes. There’s a right kind for every occasion, and even if a person doesn’t know Gunsite Scoutwhat kind of gun they want, they have a good idea in the back of their mind why they want a gun just like a woman may not know specifically what brand of shoes she needs, she knows she wants shoes for dancing at a wedding. So when a person says, “I want a gun,” they may not know what kind of gun they want, but they know they want a gun for a primary reason. If I live in a bad neighborhood, I want a gun for self defense. Do I get a scout rifle? If I want a gun to go hunting elk, do I want a scout rifle? A scout rifle could do those things, but not as well as a gun that’s designed to do those things, and in this day and age, 99 percent of shooters don’t need a gun that does everything.

“But, TJ, you bombastic simpleton, what’s the harm in getting a scout rifle if that’s what I want?” you ask.

Hey, I’m all for getting what you want. And you’re right, the above reason, in itself, is not enough to determine that a scout rifle is the wrong way to go. However, there’s another factor that, when combined with the above, makes me say no to a scout rifle.

The price.

The MSRP for a Ruger Gunsite Scout is about $1,000. A Mannlicher Scout, the over-the-counter rifle that comes closest to Cooper’s vision is $2,000. Custom-made scout rifles that accurately reflect Cooper’s concept can run past $4,000. For the price of a Mannlicher Scout, I could buy my AR15 ($1,000), my Ruger American ($380) and my FNP-9 ($500). That’s an awful lot of money for a bolt-action rifle that doesn’t hunt well during the morning hours when the deer are actually out and about.

I’m not trashing Cooper’s vision. I just think it came too late. The guys who explored the heart of Africa in the turn of the century probably would have been jazzed to have scout rifles with them. It’s the kind of rifle Teddy Roosevelt would have wanted to carry while wandering around the American west. But those frontiers aren’t frontiers anymore, and the scout rifle is a rifle that excels in a frontier.

This guy should probably have a scout rifle. But that’s because he’s living that life in one of the few places and few ways you still can.

Bearcaption


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Thinking Like a Criminal: Surprise Visits…

4438917013_4ff9808793_n“Know your enemy.”

That saying has been around, in one form or another, for as long as humans have been around. It is a valuable bit of advice to live by. Regardless of politics, religion, interests, and philosophies there is always a common enemy to us all: criminals. As long as there’s more than one person on the planet, there will always be the potential for someone to steal from or harm another and they will use any means they have available to do so.They were using rocks back in the stone age and they’ll probably be using some kind of laser beam device 1000 years in the future.

Now, having the means to protect yourself goes a long way but I never want to have to use my gun to defend myself and I know that pretty much every gun owner out there feels the same way. One of the best things we can do is make sure we never put ourselves in a situation where we would need to. Continue reading


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