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TheFirearmsForum.com
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| View Poll Results: P-3AT vs. Smith lightweight .38 for POCKET carry | |||
| Kel-tec P-3AT |
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24 | 36.36% |
| Smith J-frame (scandium or titanium) |
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42 | 63.64% |
| Voters: 66. You may not vote on this poll | |||
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#26 |
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Member
Join Date: Feb 2008
Posts: 2
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I have, and I carry, a S&W M&P 340 CT.
I carry it everyday, everywhere I go. It is about 13 ounces unloaded. I carry it in a Mikka Square Cut Pocket Holster and it is virtually invisible in shorts, kakkis, and dress pants. It is loaded with 3 38 Special +P and 2 .357 Magnum Speer Gold Dot for short barrel. Also, I carry a Bianchi speed strip with a backup to the rounds loaded in the 340. The gun and the holster are great. I practice drawing it from the pocket and the Mikka holster remains in the pocket everytime. I don't feel undergunned in the least. I believe that the S&W is better made than either the Ruger LCP or the Kel-Tec, but that is just my opinion from reading extensively on many of the gun forums. I do not own, nor have I fired either of the other two guns. In the end, perhaps it comes down to personal preference. |
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#27 | |
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Advanced Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: Colorado
Posts: 13,094
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Quote:
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--Pistolenschutze (Pistol Shooter) |
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#28 | |
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Advanced Senior Member
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Cambridge UK
Posts: 5,103
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Quote:
![]() If anyone on the forum is interested in deep carry I highly recommend Andy at Horseshoe Leather in the UK. Checkout his web site and look at the deep cover items. He really is the best, but has a waiting list. ![]()
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DVC - Diligentia, Vis, Celeritas - Accuracy, Power, Speed. The light at the end of the recession tunnel IS a train coming the other way! Last edited by TranterUK; 05-24-2008 at 01:07 PM.. Reason: spelink error |
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#29 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: PNW/Israel
Posts: 672
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Great thread, and thank you UncleFudd for some wise words.
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"We sleep safely in ours beds because rough men stand ready in the night to visit violence on those who would do us harm." George Orwell "If there must be trouble, let it be in my day, that my child may have peace." Thomas Paine |
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#30 |
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Advanced Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2007
Location: Northern piedmont of Va. and Middle of Nowhere, West Virginia
Posts: 1,013
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In looking over this thread again, I figured out what it was I didn't like about it to begin with. The choices in the poll are between a specific model of a gun with a quality control rating of "adequate" (my opinion), versus a very general list of good-value revolvers, even given the alloy frame limitation. The Kel-Tec would no doubt be more useful than a S&W model 317, which while it's an alloy J frame, is chambered in .22 LR.; the M&P 360 (msrp=$900.00 or so), would be a very competent alternative, but at three times the cost of the Kel Tec. Or perhaps a 340PD, msrp over a thousand?
It's a specific apple to citrus-varieties generally sort of choice. And as to the options as limited (kel tec v. alloy frame revolver), I wouldn't buy either one for myself. |
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#31 |
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Member
Join Date: Jun 2008
Location: Somewhere in KY
Posts: 38
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I know it hasn't been out long but the Ruger LCP is much better than the Keltec 3AT. I recommend Remington Golden Sabers 102 grain HP's in this gun.
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#32 | |
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*TFF Moderator/Host*
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: Indiana
Contributor
Posts: 4,788
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Quote:
I don't really have experience with either of them, but I've been looking at both of these guns recently as a full-time pocket pistol. I was leaning toward the Keltec simply because it's been around long enough that any real problems should have surfaced by now and nothing major has. I really would like to hear a comparison of the two from someone who has used them both.
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Nothing posted on TheFirearmsForum.com constitutes legal, accounting, gunsmithing, or other professional advice. Readers are encouraged to consult with qualified professionals for real advice. Your life is lived at your own risk. Don't blame me for the dumb things you do. |
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#33 |
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Advanced Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2006
Contributor
Posts: 1,470
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I'll admit the Ruger LOOKS better than the Keltec, but they are the same gun. There is nothing wrong with Keltec.
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#34 |
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Senior Member
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Milo, ME
Posts: 582
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I like stopping power, so I would have to choose the smith's. The air-weight in .357, running .38+p's. Don't get me wrong I love Auto's, but something that small, your not going to find something with the stopping power of a .357 in an auto. If it had to be auto, it would be the MK40.
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The two loudest sounds in the world are a click when you expect a bang, and a bang when you expect a click. |
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#35 | |
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Advanced Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Central Texas
Posts: 2,815
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Quote:
The advantage I see in the five shot Smiths, is weight, and 'form factor' making them much more difficult to identify, carried well. My Mk9 is close to two pounds, loaded, my little three inch Smith, under a pound! If I expect trouble, everything moves in the other direction; a 5" 1911, strong side, high and aft, with a compact 1911, Left side, butt forward. All shoot the same ammo, and can share the full size mags, so this could be a serious party.
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Don't start no s**t and there won't be none, Terry |
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#36 | |
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V.I.P. Member
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: OCONUS
Posts: 52
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Quote:
The follow up 2nd shot comes much quicker than with full house .357 or .38+p. Also you may want to ship it of to magnaport, for about another $300 they will port the barrel and do a custom trigger job. Thats what I did and I 'm very pleased now! Good Luck!
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"Warriors at the Edge of Freedom"
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#37 | |
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Advanced Senior Member
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Upstate NY
Posts: 2,853
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Quote:
In fact, the Keltec P-11 (9 mm) weighs the same or less than the S&W 642 and gives you twice the rounds. Plus, it's light and easy to conceal/carry all day long.
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The beauty of the second amendment is that it will not be needed until they try to take it." - Thomas Jefferson RESISTANCE IS FEUDAL... PREPARE TO SERVE. |
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#38 |
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Member
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: texas
Posts: 26
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Ruger LCP .380...any day
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#39 |
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Member
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 37
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This one is too good to pass up. Doesn't Taurus or somebody make a .45/70 pistol that would look good in an ankle holster, with gym shorts? First, define deep carry. To me that means a hide-out or back-up gun. Mine used to be a AMT .380 ACP. Of a nice size, but weighing a whopping 18 oz. After I stopped needing (if I ever did) a back-up gun Kel-Tec brought out its P-32. I've carried it in a Bianchi ankle holster. Works good, where a S&W M-36 flopped around (before aluminum frames) like a loose anchor. You hardly know you are carrying the 6 oz P-32. I actually had a son (drug task force) who carried a Glock 27 in an ankle holster. He still walks funny. I often today carry a aluminum framed S&W snubby in my coat pocket. Deep carry was the service auto lodged in a shoulder holster under my overcoat and suit coat on bad weather days years ago. I had to call a King's X just to retrieve that gun so I could play too. How embarrassing. After that my S&W M-36 went into my right overcoat/parka pocket. If you survive, you learn.
Deep carry is carry so deep it is invisable to anything except a serious search. It is a gun which by necessity is difficult to reach, worn to back up your primary gun after your loose it, or as primary in situations where a gun is an absolute no-no. It is concealed in such a way that a routine search will not expose it. That usually means ankle or crotch carry for the boys. Somebody gave me a little harness (looks it was made for my Jack Russell) that clips to my short's waistband and hangs a small autoloader right over my pubic hair. Wait a minute and I'll whip it out for you; zip, fumble, cuss, ouch, but it is deep. Back-up guns were big after the Onion Field thing. I knew a DC narc who carried three guns and would have carried four, but three was all he had. Admittedly, I've never carried a deep carry gun on duty when it was primary; one tiny gun against the big, bad world, and it buried in some unmentionabloe place, but then I was never a narc cop either. They are wierd and live in a paranoid world all their own. Know the difference between deep carry and concealed carry. There's no point in discussing concealed carry guns. Some yahoo with an extended slide 1911A or Desert Eagle .50 cal would be offended. Old Timer Old Timer Last edited by Old Timer; 12-16-2008 at 10:51 AM.. Reason: bad spelling, incomplete sentences, lack of sense |
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#40 |
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Advanced Senior Member
Join Date: May 2008
Location: Cambridge UK
Posts: 5,103
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Ah ankle holsters. I have thoughts..
Have you ever worn one? I have and it felt really weird, kinda out of balance. Perhaps one should wear a weight on the other leg to even things out. But then you may as well have a second gun on the other ankle, no point in heaving about a pointless weight. The first time someone gave me one it had a sort of wool fleece on the inside for comfort. One other guy who saw me with it asked if I had shot it myself! I also had a friend who was an American Narc Cop, I can still see him hopping down the middle of the road trying to release his ankle gun as the suspect car sped away !!!!
__________________
DVC - Diligentia, Vis, Celeritas - Accuracy, Power, Speed. The light at the end of the recession tunnel IS a train coming the other way! |
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