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was same, but after i got p365 i bought this thing for it, and it is very small and light, so, it is not adding any trouble:G17 with light is my bedside Gun. My G19 and Shield are my carry guns and neither has a light
Thought I saw you with a light the last time.G17 with light is my bedside Gun. My G19 and Shield are my carry guns and neither has a light
Night sights are largely overrated for their use. If it’s too dark to use the sights it’s basically to dark to identify. Then if you have a light that really just defeats the point.Home defense for quick identification, never permanently on, and only on my gun with night sights.
Good eye my friend, you did but I took it off my G19.Thought I saw you with a light the last time.
To the OP:
Any firearm that I have for serious use gets a light.
G17 with light is my bedside Gun. My G19 and Shield are my carry guns and neither has a light
That sounds like a beautiful setup. I guess I never really thought about it that way...but now that you mention it that does make sense. So if I understand correctly, the night sights are really only optimal under low light conditions, but once it’s pitch black you cannot identify your target anyway but flashing the light reveals your position anyway and your target would react immediately to the source. One would be better off with NV and no light period. I still like the idea of the light for an offensive situation with multiple people on my side, like if I were a cop or something, but for a bump in the night situation one would be better off identifying the target without the light and then responding adequately depending on the threat level.Night sights are largely overrated for their use. If it’s too dark to use the sights it’s basically to dark to identify. Then if you have a light that really just defeats the point.
Don’t get me wrong basically all my guns have night sights that can use them, but it’s really not a deciding factor. I have a 92LTT in my rotation with a RMR/X300 and the rear sight is blacked out. Never has it been a hindrance in our dark shooting sessions.
You’ve been warned I’ll give you permanent ear damage and a heart attack!I had trouble hitting a caravan towing a camper loaded with propane tanks with my home defense so I'm just going to pull the trigger to make noise and yell " YOU'VE BEEN STERNLY WARNED " ,
a light won't help me
There are techniques for this that work well. As a police officer we were trained to shoot with light not on the gun. This was many years ago. I still do it that way.Absolutely. Good lights are essential on any firearm you trust your life to.
When I was a shooting 'noob' I thought I could hold a flashlight in one hand and a pistol in the other. If you've never tried shooting that way, please try it. You'll immediately see how damn hard and frustrating it is.
Totally agree, this is why I also have a flashlight on my night side table and practice on the range with my flashlight underneath my shooting hand...although I will admit I’ve made the rookie error of keeping the flashlight hand above my shooting hand and got a mean slide bite on my wrist. It was no fun at all.There are techniques for this that work well. As a police officer we were trained to shoot with light not on the gun. This was many years ago. I still do it that way.
A weapon mounted light used to ID a potential threat violates one of the cardinal rules of gun safety . . . never point a gun at anything you aren't willing to destroy. So until I ID friend or foe, I don't point the gun just to ID the potential source of movement/noise.
This is my opinion as well. I learned the Rogers/Surefire method shooting low light IDPA stages. It’s also why I exempted LEO and military in my question as weapon lights make perfect sense in those applications. I asked the question because every “got a new gun” post on FB has a dot and a light mounted. I added the poll to see if NES agreed with me, or if as I’m getting older I’m unconsciously slipping into Fudd-dom. (Which according to the poll numbers, I just might be).There are techniques for this that work well. As a police officer we were trained to shoot with light not on the gun. This was many years ago. I still do it that way.
A weapon mounted light used to ID a potential threat violates one of the cardinal rules of gun safety . . . never point a gun at anything you aren't willing to destroy. So until I ID friend or foe, I don't point the gun just to ID the potential source of movement/noise.
Certain ones drain the battery... no idea whyNo, just the AR.
So if there's an intruder at night, they'll be getting filled with 5.56 instead of 9 or 45 as they would during the day.
I checked it once recently a few months ago too, totally dead battery, that would have sucked. Not sure how that happened, I never use the damn light.