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Weekly Slug - With J.R. Absher

Ed Friedman

Ah…the Government

Thank goodness the government shut down this threat to humankind.

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Dave Campbell

The Fever

Though we are still in the middle of summer, already a socio-familial malady is building rapidly. For those of you new to the game or for the great unwashed who feel they are above the hunting fray, this malady manifests itself with a general...
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Guy Sagi

New cellulite holster

Can’t afford a holster for concealed carry in your prison cell? Double your mashed potato intake, consume a case of Twinkies a day, develop recipes for rats and threaten your fellow inmates for their cookies until you put on enough weight that you... Read more.....

Not Your Father’s Savage
Chances are your dad has a Savage in his gun vault. It’s probably a Model 99 lever action, although it could be some variation of the Model 110 or Mark II, or—in the case of my dad—a Model 24F 12 gauge/.223 Rem. over-under. But I bet he doesn’t have.....Read more...

Bob Boyd

A Name Change for Legacy’s Sake

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Blackhawk SERPA Holster

 

Carry Methods, Part II
The Paddle

By Richard Mann

   Easy-on, easy-off is the appeal of the paddle holster; a holster you can remove or put on without messing with your belt. This is made possible by the attachment of a paddle or sheet of material to the back of the holster. The paddle is slid down behind the pants, pinching them between the holster and the paddle.

Blackhawk SERPA Holster
One advantage of the Blackhawk holster is the paddle can be removed and a belt-loop attachment installed. It can also be adjusted for cant with either the paddle or belt-loop attachment.

   Early paddle holsters had a leather paddle with a rib of sewn leather. This rib helped keep the holster in the pants as the handgun was withdrawn. Most modern paddle holsters rely on Kydex or injection-molded materials for paddle construction, with ridges or hooks to help hold it in place.

  Paddle holsters are very comfortable unless you have dun-lop disease. That’s where your tummy has done lopped over your belt. Most are also easy to put on. The best are hard to take off. To provide some protection against a bad guy snatching the handgun and holster from your side, a good paddle holster will really grab the pants and belt.

   This is also the weakness of the paddle holster. To get the convenience of easy-on/easy-off, you sacrifice the ability to retain the holster during a struggle for your gun. Some early paddle holsters, especially those that fit the handguns tightly, would even come away from the pants when the gun was drawn. The result was a bad guy with a holster and a gun pointing at him. Trust me, this has happened!

   Because of its ease of removal, plainclothes police officers and many citizens who carry concealed are fond of the paddle holster. From an officer-survival standpoint, it’s a poor choice because it’s not really connected to the belt. During an attempted gun grab, holsters can be ripped from paddles and the entire rig can be ripped from pants. Police officers, if they are considering a paddle holster at all, should only use those with hooks that securely grab the bottom edge of the belt. Its not bad advice for armed citizens, either.

Bladetech
Bladetech was a pioneer in the design and manufacture of Kydex holsters. Its paddle holster incorporates a shelf designed to hook the bottom of the belt on the outside of the pants to help hold the rig in place.
DeSantis
The two ears on the top edges of the paddle DeSantis uses on its holsters grip under the waistband of your trousers and to some extent, under the belt. These paddles will not allow the holster to accidentally come free when you draw your handgun, but it is not much protection from someone trying to grab the gun while holstered.

  Gene DeSantis has been making paddle holsters since 1975. He told me, “I am very concerned with the growing use of paddles for duty applications. I have and will continue to discourage this practice, because a paddle can never be a 100-percent anchor like a belt-mounted model.”

   On the other hand, paddle holsters can be great recreational holsters. I often use them in competition and during range training sessions—frequently a Blackhawk SERPA, level two retention holster that can be adjusted for cant and used as a belt or paddle holster. It can even be used in conjunction with Blackhawk’s Quick-Disconnect system that allows you attach the holster to just about anything. (More to come on this topic around Thanksgiving!)

   I think DeSantis summed up the paddle holster well when he told me, “…paddle designs are more convenient, more comfortable and more versatile, but they are meant to be a concealment holster and never to be exposed to an adversary’s eyes!”



 

 

Contact Information:

Blackhawk
www.blackhawk.com

Bladetech
www.bladetech.com

DeSantis Holster & Leather Goods
www.desantisholster.com

 

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Holster Retention Levels

Safariland defines retention levels based on the number of retention devices that must be overcome to release the gun from the holstered position. The definition of retention levels can vary from manufacturer to manufacturer, but essentially each step up in the level of retention represents an additional action that must be performed to draw the firearm.

For example, some manufacturers consider level-one retention to be the friction between the holster and the handgun. Level-two could be friction and a thumb-break or release button like on the Blackhawk SERPA. Level-three might be friction, a thumb break and the requirement to rock the handgun to the rear before it’s released. For law enforcement officers, or anyone wearing a handgun exposed, level-three holsters are a suggested minimum.

Blackhawk SERPA Holster
The Blackhawk SERPA holster has a unique finger release that must be depressed before the handgun can be removed. The company considers this to be a level two retention holster.

Paddle Holsters

DeSantis has been making paddle holsters since 1975. Its paddle holsters are comfortable and durable, but as Gene DeSantis says, they are intended as concealment holsters.

 

 

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