I believe pistols are the next necessary equipment in urban ops.This should have been introduced a long time ago.Originally posted by SpecOps87:HEy guys,understand that police officers in the Special Operations Command are issued with revolvers even when responding to riots. Is it practical to issue a firearm with only 5 rounds of ammunition storage capacity in a environment where there may be hundreds or thousands of rioters?Not forgetting the fact that the rioters might snatch their sidearm and turn it against them,even though the weapon may have a retention and recovery system. Besides this...issuing a weapon wif a mere 5 round capacity when the need arises is almost no difference.Reloading of a revolver takes a longer time to reload, compared to the ease of ejecting and slipping in a new magazine for a semi-auto.
Btw,does the SAF issue pistols on real world ops?Read from an earlier post that WO's,Officers and PS above will get equipped with a pistol.Any idea of the loadout? Also..6SIR has equipped troopers of PS and above who are known as Force Commanders with pistols in a thigh rig too.Any comments from anyone in 6SIR to share mroe about this?
depends on situationOriginally posted by SpecOps87:HEy guys,understand that police officers in the Special Operations Command are issued with revolvers even when responding to riots. Is it practical to issue a firearm with only 5 rounds of ammunition storage capacity in a environment where there may be hundreds or thousands of rioters?Not forgetting the fact that the rioters might snatch their sidearm and turn it against them,even though the weapon may have a retention and recovery system. Besides this...issuing a weapon wif a mere 5 round capacity when the need arises is almost no difference.Reloading of a revolver takes a longer time to reload, compared to the ease of ejecting and slipping in a new magazine for a semi-auto.
Btw,does the SAF issue pistols on real world ops?Read from an earlier post that WO's,Officers and PS above will get equipped with a pistol.Any idea of the loadout? Also..6SIR has equipped troopers of PS and above who are known as Force Commanders with pistols in a thigh rig too.Any comments from anyone in 6SIR to share mroe about this?
A revolver will have 6 rounds in the drum and not 5.Originally posted by SpecOps87:HEy guys,understand that police officers in the Special Operations Command are issued with revolvers even when responding to riots. Is it practical to issue a firearm with only 5 rounds of ammunition storage capacity in a environment where there may be hundreds or thousands of rioters?Not forgetting the fact that the rioters might snatch their sidearm and turn it against them,even though the weapon may have a retention and recovery system. Besides this...issuing a weapon wif a mere 5 round capacity when the need arises is almost no difference.Reloading of a revolver takes a longer time to reload, compared to the ease of ejecting and slipping in a new magazine for a semi-auto.
Btw,does the SAF issue pistols on real world ops?Read from an earlier post that WO's,Officers and PS above will get equipped with a pistol.Any idea of the loadout? Also..6SIR has equipped troopers of PS and above who are known as Force Commanders with pistols in a thigh rig too.Any comments from anyone in 6SIR to share mroe about this?
Rounds loaded into a revolver will depends on the make. Smith & Wesson .38 the one that our police force is facing out is loaded with 5 rounds with another 5 spare in a poach. The Taurus revolver which is already replacing the S & W if I m not wrong is also loaded with 5 rounds.Originally posted by SNAG01:A revolver will have 6 rounds in the drum and not 5.
when dealing with rioters, the primary weapon is tear gas, baton and shield.....
A revolver should be for self defence. in a riot task force, there should be marksmen armed with a rilfe..... these are the primary firearm.
There is a rapid loader for revolvers, which US law enforcement agencies used to have, before most of them converted to pistols. The time to reload is the same. Revolvers suffer from small ammo capacity which was why the FBI changed to pistols, after an incident in the 1970s, in which 3 of their officers were killed or injured during a shootout with 2 guys who were armed with pistols and shotguns !Originally posted by SpecOps87:HEy guys,understand that police officers in the Special Operations Command are issued with revolvers even when responding to riots. Is it practical to issue a firearm with only 5 rounds of ammunition storage capacity in a environment where there may be hundreds or thousands of rioters?Not forgetting the fact that the rioters might snatch their sidearm and turn it against them,even though the weapon may have a retention and recovery system. Besides this...issuing a weapon wif a mere 5 round capacity when the need arises is almost no difference.Reloading of a revolver takes a longer time to reload, compared to the ease of ejecting and slipping in a new magazine for a semi-auto.
Btw,does the SAF issue pistols on real world ops?Read from an earlier post that WO's,Officers and PS above will get equipped with a pistol.Any idea of the loadout? Also..6SIR has equipped troopers of PS and above who are known as Force Commanders with pistols in a thigh rig too.Any comments from anyone in 6SIR to share mroe about this?
I believe Tasers will be used more widely.But we hope that the SAF will not have to be called to deal with a riot one day.Originally posted by OH-FF:I dont think the Educated public capacity of Singapore wants a Riot.
Although there may be possibility of peaceful demostrations in the future, but before some issues have to be discussed with demostrations , the Garment will come up with some panadol to help the Headache.Training POs to be responsible for their rounds are a good practice. Such that only responsible officers get to hold such barbaric weapons.
Revolvers are not good to aim with so unless really necessary, one shouldnt fire it into the crowd. Especially with people in the background and the target a distance away.
Arms should only be used in life threatening cases.
The revolvers by S&W and Taurus chambered in 38 Special all have cylinders that hold six cartridges.Originally posted by vincep:Rounds loaded into a revolver will depends on the make. Smith & Wesson .38 the one that our police force is facing out is loaded with 5 rounds with another 5 spare in a poach. The Taurus revolver which is already replacing the S & W if I m not wrong is also loaded with 5 rounds.
The .50 Desert Eagle pistol for example, not only has a nasty recoil, it is also too big for most people's hands to grip.Indeed, the grip is rather large and uncomfortable to hold, but recoil is surprisingly tolerable due to the sheer weight of the pistol and the gas-operated recoil mechanism.
* Safety is better for when dropped, there is virtually no chance of the weapon going off unless it was already cocked.Only if the revolver is equipped with an FP safety. See my previous post. Also note that if a cocked hammer is accidentally released when a revolver is dropped, the FP safety will prevent the hammer from striking the FP.
Double-action revolvers solves that problem, though the trigger pull is slightly tougher.Originally posted by tvdog:REVOLVER DISADVANTAGES
* A handgun is already hard to shoot properly. A revolver takes an even longer time to master especially for rapid firing without manually cocking every round.
That's what I mean by revolver taking a long time to master. I was told by police NSF friends that when shooting double-action - i.e. one long trigger pull - most of them couldn't even hit a stationary target. If they cock first, slightly better chance.Originally posted by Raptor937:Double-action revolvers solves that problem, though the trigger pull is slightly tougher.
Try telling that to THIS guy!Originally posted by tvdog:That's what I mean by revolver taking a long time to master. I was told by police NSF friends that when shooting double-action - i.e. one long trigger pull - most of them couldn't even hit a stationary target. If they cock first, slightly better chance.
R.E.S.P.E.C.T.Originally posted by Meia Gisborn:
If you want to be acurate the best is to shoot using doublt -action method, same even for M-16, revolvers and pistols.Originally posted by tvdog:That's what I mean by revolver taking a long time to master. I was told by police NSF friends that when shooting double-action - i.e. one long trigger pull - most of them couldn't even hit a stationary target. If they cock first, slightly better chance.
For trigger pull, for both pistol and revolver, you acutally can tune it . Each person have different feel, thus different pull needed. A proper gunsmith is able to adjust it to suit the individual.Originally posted by Raptor937:Double-action revolvers solves that problem, though the trigger pull is slightly tougher.
But with practice one can fire a single-action pretty quick, cowboys.![]()