Thumb breaks, forefinger breaks, safety, no safety... if you have to spend that long explaining all the differences then you're doing something wrong. I have personally witnessed something VERY similar but on a reholster about 4' directly in front of me and slightly to the left so I had a front row seat. Guy was also shooting a 1911 and had a serpa holster. Coincidence? Maybe, maybe not. I personally use a Glock (no safety) and pressure retention holsters. There's nothing beyond basic movements to remember or train for. To me the fewer variables the less movements you need to practice and the less movements you have to concentrate on allowing you to focus on the fundamentals. Elbow up, elbow down, firm grip, pull straight up and clear holster and swing forward before moving trigger finger. The guy that ND'd himself in front of me as also a very experienced shooter, LEO, firearms instructor, range owner, etc. He also shot a variety of firearms back to back and this time it bit him. Sounds like some of the same attributes were included on this ND so parallels can be drawn. The guy that ND'd himself Immediately blamed it on a faulty holster. Standing in a perfect place to see exactly what happened though it was operator error as he never cleared his trigger finger so when he holstered the holster pressed his finger into the trigger. Now, while I wouldn't blame it on a faulty holster because that just shows an unwillingness to admit fault which allows for learning I would blame it on the complexity of the various shooting systems, retention systems & holsters being used. I think if one can pick a weapon system and holster they like the best (or are required to use) and train on them exclusively these exact type of ND's will be drastically reduced. It's nice to know how they all work and be proficient on all of them but I don't think it's as important as being as safe and proficient as possible with your primary carry/draw/competition platform. I can see wanting to know how different handguns fire in case you ever need to pick one up in a defensive situation but when are you going to quickly strap on someone else's holster and quick draw to defend? Not likely.
I'm just rambling now so if anyone can take anything useful away from what I just said then you're a patient human being.![]()



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