Darkside wrote:
The Division wrote:
Was going to start a thread called Guns Guns Guns but this looks like a good place to put my questions:
1) I guess I'd need to handle them individually, but what kind of handgun would you recommend for a male and for a female? Both are novices. How much would these cost?
2) I would assume you'd recommend novices to take a class? Are there different classes to take?
3) How often do you recommend going to the range and practicing? How many rounds do you shoot during one trip to the range?
4) What sort of safety equipment is required? Ear protection, eye protection? Holster? Anything else?
5) How much ammo do you recommend having?
This is all I can think of right now. I'll add anything back to this thread as I think of it.
1.
My wife shoots a .45 and she shoots it better than th 9mm she bought. You can spend on average let's say $1000 on a decent handgun. As noted before, I'm big on the 1911 .45 ACP. It's probably the most customizable handgun on the planet so you can set it up easily to your liking.
2.
Fuck yes take classes. I'm a pretty experienced shooter and I still take classes when I can.
3.
Go to the range as much as you can afford and enjoy.
4.
Most ranges require eye protection. I bought electronic ear muffs for like maybe 60 bucks. You can hear people talking to you. But the microphone cuts out above a certain dB rating so then they're just regular muffs. Regular muffs can be 15 bucks. Buy the best you can afford.
5.
Once you're settled on a platform, 9mm, 38, 40, 45 whatever... when you're comfortable with a gun and can handle a caliber you buy every last round you can afford. I used to have a couple 9mm and my .45 1911 and I bought some ammo of each. Turns out I'm much better with my 1911. So I buy a lot of 45 acp. People used to tease me about how much I bought. Maybe I got several thousand rounds in reserve. I'll buy more each chance I get.
Here's the deal. Every election year, and particularly presidential election years, ammo becomes scarce. My asshole friends giving me shit for buying a couple thousand rounds at a time were begging me for ammo in late 2020.
I typically shoot 200 rounds in a session. When I'm done shooting I buy 500-1000 depending on my cash ow at the time.
Any more than 200 in a session and you're not learning you're just getting tired.
Thanks DS, great stuff!
Since I live Houston, there are plenty of ranges within 10 miles of where I live so practice, classes, guns and ammo should be easy to obtain. One range close by offers the following class:
Private one-on-one instruction
Assistance in weapon selection
Firearms and range safety
Thorough understanding of a handgun and its operation
Proper fundamentals of marksmanship
First half of the class is in a classroom setting/Second half is on the range
I think starting with a class like this makes sense. Since they assist with weapon selection, can see which one feels best and go from there.