Yes, and no. I've finally settled (95% of the time) on a Smith Airweight 38, and even after trying, I can't seem to ween myself off of it LOL. I'm convinced that in the vast majority of SD cases, good situational awareness, and (if necessary) merely producing a pistol, is enough to avoid or defuse a situation. The likelihood of any of us ever being in a running gun battle, requiring large capacity mags, and mag changes, is extremely low. When I travel, or expect to be in an area with higher risk than I normally run around in, I'll often drag around a larger semi-auto, but most days, I feel safe (and comfortable) with my trusty Airweight 38.Unpopular opinions:
1.) Small frame revolvers suck. Bad sights, bad triggers, and the barrels are too short. They should come with 2.5" barrels and have full-length ejection of .38 spl cases. And big, bright sights with a H U G E rear notch.
I agree 100%, in fact, it's this exact reasoning that first got me into lever actions, as well as revolvers. We'd have to be blind and stupid to discount the storm clouds on the horizon, and assume our gun-friendly states can't turn into New Jersey, in just one or two election cycles, or even a single scotus decision.Unpopular opinions:
2.) .......... But if semi-autos were banned and people were limited to owning only a couple of firearms, then a .30-30 lever would be looking pretty darn good as a multipurpose long gun.
Again, agreed. Besides the size and weight of 1911's keeping me from ever EDC-ing them, I don't like being forced to use the safety to avoid the hair trigger, and then once the safety is disengaged, you're back to that hair trigger! Personally, my ideal carry platform is something like a Walther P99AS, that has a de-cocker. It keeps the pistol in 100% ready-mode, while making an AD pretty close to impossible.Unpopular opinions:
3.) Single-action semi-auto pistols that you have to carry "cocked and locked" (condition One) aren't good choices for most people. They're too dangerous in the hands of a novice, and among serious gun lovers who carry and shoot many different kinds of firearms, I wouldn't trust myself to remember to flick off the safety in an emergency. It would only work for me if that were the ONLY handgun I shot regularly, and I put twice as many rounds though my 1911 style carry gun than all other handguns put together.
And again, agreed. Bluing can look amazing, I love a pristine old Smith as much as anyone, but a pistol is a tool, and a high-wear, corrosion prone one at that. Bluing is less than useless, if not an outright detriment.Unpopular opinions:
4.) Blued steel, beautiful rich hot blueing, especially the old school kind that had a blue hue, not pure black, is the worst finish imaginable for a firearm. Easy to scratch, easy to rust, offers no protection to the gun, but is expensive to apply. If your gun is used and carried often, it makes your gun look old quickly. But it's a great finish for wall-hangers and safe queens.
it would be worth considering...