A few thoughts about the revolver in
self defense.
Wednesday, November 04, 2009 Filed in:
Revolvers, Self
defense
Regular readers know that, despite my (occasionally) bombastic
promotion of the wheelgun, I'm the first to admit that it is not
the perfect tool for all jobs. The revolver's suitability for self
defense depends on the nature of the threat one expects to
encounter.
The revolver's greatest weakness is its limited capacity, while its
greatest virtue is its resistance to externally induced
failures.
It is something of a trend among today's fashionable criminals to
attack in multiples, i.e. more than one assailant. If each of the
assailants is committed to the success of the attack, especially if
each of them will have to be shot more than once, the revolver may
in fact be at a disadvantage. Remembering that
there is no such thing as a magic bullet, if you have three
assailants and only five rounds you may have some hard choices to
make.
This scenario often plays out during home invasion robberies. In
these types of incidents, a revolver for home defense may be
sub-optimal; a high capacity autoloader may be a better
choice.
While many may scoff at the idea of more than a single attacker, or
believe the old saw "shoot the leader, the rest will run", this is
a very real risk. This is particularly the case in areas with
substantial gang activity (which is just about everywhere these
days.) If you keep a revolver for home defense, this is a
possibility you need to consider.
On the other hand, most assaults are still of the good ol'
one-on-one variety, and those outside of the home tend to fit this
profile. These are personal crimes, and the action tends to be
close in, fast, and violent - conditions in which the revolver,
being the quintessential reactive tool, shines. It is quick into
action and is less likely to experience functional failure in a
close fight; there is no slide to be pushed out of battery, or
slowed to induce a jam.
That isn't to say an autoloader is useless in that environment,
only that it requires a bit more management. Gabe Suarez is at the leading edge of
teaching close-in handgun deployment, and he's developed techniques
to keep autos running in tight conditions. A revolver, though, is
largely immune to the mechanical difficulties of fighting "in the
hole", and remains a viable choice for that reason.
Is that a reasonable tradeoff for capacity? I think so.
-=[
Grant ]=-
Tags: attacks