Follow-Up on Thursday’s Wyoming Bear Attack

Another flaw with Glocks (striker fires in general) is the are easy to take out of battery if pressing the barrel against an object just enough to push the slide rearward slightly. Renders the pistol useless. Someone like the one this thread got started from that put the pistol against the bears head could easily make that happen. Wouldn't happen using a revolver. Not sure I've ever heard any Glock owner claim that Glocks NEVER jam or fail. Shoot enough and it will happen. The one thing that a semi auto pistol owner should do is find the ammunition that best performs in their gun of choice. All of it performs well in a revolver (functionally speaking). Some shoot more accurately but it all fires. My Glocks have preferred loads that do not jam. Yes, I said it, DO NOT jam. I have shot some heavy 10mm loads that DO jam. I only use what works in my guns. Most don't go thru that selection and time to find which is the very best in a particular gun. It's a must if you use a semi auto for defense from any biped, let alone quadruped. Double action pistols have about double the trigger pull weight than a semi auto pistol does. That's a thing to consider as well in a Bear defense scenario. Especially one handed defense.
 
😂 be tough to holster but holy cow close range!!!
Bayonet Picatinny rail and just jab in and pull trigger! 😱
IMG_6048.jpeg
 
So much for Glocks dont ever jam, said every Glock owner ever.
Nothing is completely foolproof. Just this week I had three Subaru owners tell me that Subarus don't break down. I just smiled and said " and here you are on the other side of my counter." I am slower with a revolver the a semi auto. But I carry a revolver.
 
I like my 686+ .357 Mag 7 shot. 4" barrel but still shoots nice. I bought 500 Nosler 180gr Partions from Widners on close out years ago. I wonder if they would be as good as the 187gr hard cast I have as well. I could take 6 shots and keep one in reserve. For me. 🤷🏻‍♂️
Yup. Ammo selection is a very real consideration that some don't consider. They buy what's cheap (or available) and think alls well. Really? Not on your life. If my rear end is going into dangerous game territory, you can bet it all that I will have vetted my ammo selection well. And ensured selected gun and ammo is functional together and convinced I'm ready for everything I can foresee. Hopefully.
 
I'm not sure what people are reading into. Did it say he got a stove pipe? Doesn't even sound like the guy knows how his Glock jammed.

It coils have been a magazine feeding issue, it could have been limp wristing while he fell etc.

Along the lines, since he was shooting the bear as it charged, more than likely the gun got knocked out of battery when he happened to pull the trigger.

..and remember kids…tap-rack-bang
 
I'm not sure what people are reading into. Did it say he got a stove pipe? Doesn't even sound like the guy knows how his Glock jammed.

It coils have been a magazine feeding issue, it could have been limp wristing while he fell etc.

Along the lines, since he was shooting the bear as it charged, more than likely the gun got knocked out of battery when he happened to pull the trigger.

..and remember kids…tap-rack-bang
That bear being as close as it was would cause even the best pistol marksman to get a bit nervous. Performing an Emergency Action Drill is supposed to be instinctive. Hard to do when the bear is already chewing on you. Practice, practice, practice.
 
That bear being as close as it was would cause even the best pistol marksman to get a bit nervous. Performing an Emergency Action Drill is supposed to be instinctive. Hard to do when the bear is already chewing on you. Practice, practice, practice.
It should be muscle memory. That's the point of muscle memory, so when your shot, or being chewed on, your gross motor skills and mind have a reaction that's useful.

Sounds like it worked out for him.
 

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