If you could only pick one gun as a carry gun for the rest of your life, what would it be?

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Ron Dan

President of Field Ethos
Staff member
FE Staff
For me, it's hard to beat a Glock 19. It's small enough to conceal in almost every outfit and situation, yet it's large enough to be a fighting pistol for me. Recently I've been carrying the S&W M&P9 Compact Carry Comp and that's been a solid option. Same concealability as my 19 but it shoots as soft as a gun that's twice the size and weight.
 
I've personally packed everything from micro-compact 9's to big bore wheelguns to DIY 1911's and those adorable little North American Arms mini-revolvers. I'm almost embarrassed to admit that the new KelTec PR57 is now my constant companion. Its dimensions are anorexic, and the gun is all but weightless. It charges from the top and packs 20 rounds of 5.7x28 onboard. As it lacks a removable magazine, the gun is markedly smaller than the competition. I pack it at work, in town, and on my rural walks. I have had to draw it once on a feral dog that tried to bite my wife but the mutt got the message and moved on. Nothing bites my wife and lives...
 
I've personally packed everything from micro-compact 9's to big bore wheelguns to DIY 1911's and those adorable little North American Arms mini-revolvers. I'm almost embarrassed to admit that the new KelTec PR57 is now my constant companion. Its dimensions are anorexic, and the gun is all but weightless. It charges from the top and packs 20 rounds of 5.7x28 onboard. As it lacks a removable magazine, the gun is markedly smaller than the competition. I pack it at work, in town, and on my rural walks. I have had to draw it once on a feral dog that tried to bite my wife but the mutt got the message and moved on. Nothing bites my wife and lives...
I've got a PR57 in the safe. It's so much gun in such a small package.
 
Although I have since gone to a Glock 17 with a light and an optic (I'm big enough that it is concealable in nearly every circumstance), I think the answer to the question as posed was, is and for the foreseeable future will be the Glock 19.

I wrote extensively about why in this piece from almost exactly fifteen years ago.


Some excerpts:

What makes a firearm beautiful to me, what I admire above all other qualities, is reliability – the weapon's ability to function as it is supposed to function tens of thousands of times in a row without a single failure. Certainly a firearm ought to fire a caliber useful to the task; and of course I need to be able to shoot that firearm accurately enough to put rounds into a useful part of the target. But if a gun will only do that 999 times out of thousand, it’s of no use to me. That weapon might belong in some collection, but it doesn’t belong in my holster.

Thus, my relationship to firearms is a utilitarian one. Their possession serves an essential, but narrow purpose. They exist to accomplish a task. They are the necessary tool for a job I hope not to have to do. One might as well speak of a pretty life insurance policy. For me, collecting guns would make the same sense as collecting hammers, or circular saws, or snow tires. Like some hoplophilic disciple of Louis Henry Sullivan, I demand that, and am pleased when, a gun’s form follows its function to the essential exclusion of all other aesthetics.

The function at issue is defense of life in gravest extreme. If such defense of your life and the lives of others is a God-given natural right -- and it is -- then your choice of the tools you employ in that exercise is necessarily a matter of great moment. To be clear, it's not even slightly as important as having the right mindset or sufficient training. But tools do matter, and among the tools I choose is the ugly black pistol pictured above, a Glock 19.

* * *

Robert’s Rule states that “Simplicity is Murphy’s only natural enemy.” At the core of what makes this pistol reliable (which is to say beautiful) is that it is about as simple as a pistol can be. It takes perhaps two minutes to learn how to “field strip” the Glock 19 – that is, to disassemble it into its major components for cleaning and maintenance. Each time after that initial tutorial, field stripping and reassembly take about 12 seconds each. No tool is necessary to accomplish this. Beyond that, the pistol can be completely disassembled into its only 35 parts with a simple punch in perhaps a minute.That's kind of lovable, too.


Another of Robert’s Rules holds that “Only a fool tries to say better what has already been said perfectly.” Better, like a good reporter, to quote with full attribution:

"I do not love the bright sword for its sharpness, nor the arrow for its swiftness, nor the warrior for his glory. I love only that which they defend"
J.R.R. Tolkien, via Faramir, in The Two Towers.
 
We have a couple of KelTec PMR30s but it's just a little too long for a daily carry. I've tried and it's just not quite right. My wife keeps one in her truck (she hauls horses a lot) and I have one at home by the bed. We like them but it's not something I want to have on me concealed all the time.

I'm thinking of getting us a couple of PR57s to use for daily body carry as I keep hearing about how great they are for that use.
 
If I only could have one, it would be a 1911 Commander, .45ACP of course. A guru in the AZ high desert told me this was the correct choice, which was fine, since I've carried one since I was a teenager.

That said, I've carried a lot of plastic pistols in mouse calibers. I mostly carry a SA Hellcat these days. That little pistol just flat works.
 

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