CARACAL COMMITS TO US MARKET WITH WILCOX PARTNERSHIP

LAS VEGAS, Nevada — Caracal and Wilcox Industries have announced today a new strategic partnership that will see Caracal firearms produced for the first time in the United States from Wilcox’s world-class manufacturing facility in Newington, New Hampshire.

Senior officials from Caracal, the Emirates Defence Industries Company (EDIC) and Wilcox Industries.
Senior officials from Caracal, the Emirates Defence Industries Company (EDIC) and Wilcox Industries.

On the new partnership, Hamad Al Ameri, CEO of Caracal said, “This partnership takes Caracal to the next level, and supports our long-term strategic goals for the United States. Our two highly-experienced teams will be working hand-in-hand, collaborating and sharing expertise on the design and development as well as the manufacturing and testing of new, exciting Caracal products customised for the US market.”

Wilcox is well-known to the industry as an innovation leader when it comes to tactical products developed to support special forces units in the United States and globally, and are highly sought after by many of the top gun makers.

Under the terms of the partnership, Caracal’s US-based subsidiary, Caracal USA will co-locate its headquarters with Wilcox, with its Idaho office serving as its marketing arm. Target weapons for production at the facility include the 5.56mm CAR 814 direct impingement, semi-automatic rifle and the CAR 816 short stroke gas-piston semi-automatic rifle, both of which are designed for the US sporting market. Select-fire variants of these rifles will also be made for the defence and security market. Caracal’s new generation Enhanced F 9mm pistol will also be made in the facility. The production of the CAR family of rifles will also enable Caracal USA and Wilcox to now compete for US government arms contracts.

Speaking on the strategic partnership, Mr. Jim Teetzel, founder and CEO of Wilcox Industries, said, “We are proud to have Caracal working and collaborating alongside our team. This unique partnership represents the future of the industry, where leading experts from around the world unite to develop cutting-edge products for the market.”

The partnership will also provide Caracal with manufacturing and distribution rights for the Wilcox fusion system and the 40mm Grenade Launcher Module (GLM).

Caracal and Wilcox will be showcasing their latest products at SHOT Show 2016 at the Sands Expo Center in Las Vegas, Nevada from January 19th to 22nd. For members of the media and industry buyers, Caracal will have live demonstrations of select products at Industry Day at The Range located in Boulder City, Nevada on January 18th.

Wilcox is an industry leader in the design and manufacture of high quality tactical equipment for use by military and law enforcement in the United States. Product lines include Night Vision Mounting Systems, Small Arms Systems, the PATRIOT Hybrid Life Support System and Combat Systems including an accessory line that significantly enhances rifle modularity, all of which present a significant tactical advantage for the end user.

Caracal is the only OEM small arms company in the Middle East, and it is now being backed by a strong industrial parent company, the Emirates Defence Industries Company (EDIC). This unique arrangement allows for Caracal to receive maximum resources and support in order to drive the next phase of growth for the company, including its new US presence.

Caracal CEO Hamad Al Ameri and Wilcox Industries CEO Jim Teetzel endorse their new strategic partnership.
Caracal CEO Hamad Al Ameri and Wilcox Industries CEO Jim Teetzel endorse their new strategic partnership.

Attendees can visit Caracal at its booth 2829 in Hall 1and Wilcox at its booth 7208 in Hall 1 during SHOT Show.

Kimber K6s Revolver

New for 2016 from Kimber is something that no one expected: a compact, six shot revolver. That’s right, Kimber is making a wheelgun.

Kimber-K6s-revolver

And it looks damn good to my eye. The new K6 is an all stainless steel carry gun with a 2 inch barrel, putting it square against the SP101 and S&W 640 as competitors, but unlike either of those guns it holds a 6th shot in its .357 Magnum cylinder. That is a neat trick.

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The Folly of Chasing Gear – CCW Version, Part 1

When I wrote my original post on the folly of chasing gear for competition I did so at a point where I had been competing for a little over a year and had less than ten matches under my belt.  For a reference I write this post having concealed carry for almost 12 years and in that time I have changed guns and platforms an order of magnitude more than I did with competition gear.  With Part 1 I will look into some guns I tried and what I learned.

If you are new to concealed carry this as an example of what not to do; If you are a CCW veteran this might seem familiar or even laughable to you.  Either way I present to you a method not worth repeating.

The First CCW Gun

The first gun CCW gun I bought was going to be my last – or so I thought when I paid for it – a Rock Island 1911 Officer’s model.  Presently Rock Island (Armscor) has built a reputation for decent 1911’s; mine was not made in the era of praise.  It had so much going wrong for it I can’t list it all; a sample includes: GI sights, no beaver tail, a gritty 7+ lbs trigger, sticky mag release (it would stick in!) and the worst Parkerized finish imaginable.  It would feed 230 grain ball ammo, sometimes and it would feed JHP’s exactly never.  I did a little work on it, got it to function semi-reliably and actually used it in the shooting portion of my licensing. It was accurate: when it fed.  For the record, the magazine brand or type didn’t matter, this sucker was the king of feedway stoppages!  I quickly quit trying to make it a reliable gun and relegated it to range toy, but it sucked at that as well.  I sold it, with full disclosure of the problems to a guy who wanted it for a truck gun on his ranch.  As far as I know he hasn’t shot it even once.

That was followed by a string of mediocre garbage by Bersa, Taurus, Rossi and Kel Tec.

Lesson #1: Don’t believe what you read and damn sure don’t listen to the guy behind the counter.  Find a reputable trainer/friend/co-worker and get several opinions and never, ever, ever, never, ever buy a cheap 1911 and plan on it saving your life.

The Airweight J-Frame

In my string of crap I did manage to hit a home run, at least with reliability, build quality and accuracy.  I bought a slightly used S&W Model 642-1.  I slapped some Crimson Trace grips on it and carried it often.  8 years later I still have it.  It has ridden IWB, OWB, in my pocket, on my ankle, in my console, and in a backpack. It goes bang every time and after putting untold rounds down range I can actually make decent hits with it. It is not extremely fun to shoot, but it works. I WOULD NEVER RECOMMEND ONE FOR A FEMALE BEGINNER! For that matter, I wouldn’t recommend any J-Frame to a female beginner. If I am really dressed up, ala’ funeral or wedding (one and the same?) then you’ll find that old 642 in my pocket. Otherwise it spends it days in peaceful solitude, secure in the fact I can never be sold because of the discoloration caused years of sweat and grime.

642-1

Lesson #2: The Airweight J-Frame’s are fine firearms, IF and only IF you are willing to learn it. It is not a gun for people who are recoil sensitive and it is not range toy.  It is ultra reliable, easy to carry and will always be there for you.

380 ACP? I’ve owned a few

An old FI Industries D380 1911 look-alike, a Kel-Tec P3AT, the Bersa Thunder CC and most recently a Ruger LCP. After shooting way too many rounds of over-priced 380 ACP I can safely say I am done with that cartridge. Fixed barrel blowback operated 380’s have more muzzle flip than an equivalent size 9mm with a normal recoil operated action. The smaller guns hold fewer rounds and with a shorter barrel you generally get weaker performance compared to the S&W 642. Before some smart ass says it, no I don’t want to be shot with either one. The small LCP/P3AT carried great in my pocket, but so does my 642 and it is not as susceptible to lint and if I am shooting from an odd grip or odd position I won’t be the recipient of a  stove-pipe.  For me, the small 380’s and 5 shot revolvers fill the same role.  Choose wisely.

Lesson #3: Carry the most powerful handgun you can conceal, all else being equal. Any handgun cartridge is a poor man stopper, don’t make the situation worse by compromising.

With that I will wrap up Part 1.  If this offended you just wait for Part 2!  The mathematical constant in all of these lessons is wasted time and wasted money that could have been spent on training and ammo.

Do you feel I am grossly wrong?  Have you made similar mistakes?  Tell me below.

Tactical lingerie

No, I’m not talking about camouflage undergarments for ladies, although that is also (sadly) a thing. No, I’m talking about tactical CCW gear, generally marketing towards women, that looks cool/hot but is pretty much useless.

bass pro camo lingerie

For example, thigh holsters. Not tactical drop leg holsters, which while frequently used incorrectly do have their purpose, but rather those inner thigh holsters you see at crappy gun shows and from shady “custom” holster makers. These holsters usually consist of an elastic band with a holster body crudely stitched on to the band to accommodate the little lady’s chrome plated .25 or whatever silly bullshit gun they’re carrying. You know, like this appalling piece of crap.

Image from Femme Fatale Holster
Image from Femme Fatale Holster

The reason I’m writing about this today comes from the discussion around Shelley’s post about Women’s Concealed Carry, which addressed some of the issues the firearms industry has around products for women; in Shelley’s usual speed-of-thought style. An offsite discussion brought up the topic of what we consider to be gimmick/sub-par carry methods, like bra holsters or thigh holsters as acceptable options to quality products. This of course drove me off the rails, and lead to me coining the term “tactical lingerie” that you see in the headline of this post. A piece of gear is tactical lingerie if it’s designed to look cool/sexy but has little to no practical application whatsoever.

Stuff like this goes back to the idea of the gun as a talisman instead of a tool. Self-defense isn’t about what you’re carrying, it’s about your mind. A gun in a thigh holster, or a corset holster (that’s also a thing, apparently) is functionally inaccessible if you actually need it in a hurry, and I’d be willing to bet my sizable collection of M&Ps that no one who’s ever carried in one of these garbage holsters has ever spent any kind of time practicing getting their gun out in a hurry to actually shoot a fool. That’s genuinely important, because while we gloss over it all the time in the name of political correctness, the entire point of carrying a gun is so that you can use it to defend your life. It’s not a cute little fashion accessory, it’s a gun.

Maybe this is just me getting old and crotchety, which I’m fine with too. But stuff like this, gimmick holsters, gimmick guns, it all drives me up the wall. It cheapens the idea of self-defense and reduces the serious responsibility involved in taking up that burden to the same trivial level you’d assign to a pair of cute panties. Worse, it creates a false sense of security in the fundamentally unskilled and unserious person that because they have a gun, they’re safe. That person can then abrogate any sense of self-awareness that should come with going about their life armed, because “they’ve got a gun.”

Mindset is always the first tool of self defense. It doesn’t matter if you’re carrying an M&P under a polo shirt in 5.11 pants or a Spyderdo in a sundress. Everything you add on top of mindset is just tools. Stop pretending that shitty tools are as good as the real thing.

1911 Magazine Recommendations

47D (left) & ETM (right)
47D (left) & ETM (right)

As I’ve been working on my 1911 Rating System, one major topic of discussion has been magazines. Specifically, what magazines to use when evaluating 1911s. The plan for any official 1911 review is that I’ll run the first couple of hundred rounds with whatever factory mags the gun ships with, and if those cause issues deduct points accordingly. After the first few hundred rounds, I’ll switch to the “control” magazine: Wilson Combat ETM.

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Beginner’s Guide to CCW: Arm yourself with knowledge

Last year I thought I had encountered an all-time high of people looking to buy their first gun or to get a concealed carry permit. World events and political developments have combined to make what I thought was the high water mark look like low tide. It has hit the point where gun sales breaking records is becoming a common phenomenon. In fact, in my email inbox right now there are a couple of emails from people looking to take me to lunch so they can get my input on their first firearm purchase.

Fighting Smarter is the best foundational resource available today, in my opinion.

It is beyond question that a lot of new purchasers are in those record-breaking numbers, and a sizable percentage of them are buying firearms as weapons of personal defense. If that’s you or someone you know, awesome. I’m glad you’ve decided to arm yourself…but having the gun is just part of the personal defense equation. You also need to arm yourself with knowledge. Knowledge about the realities of criminal assault and successful personal defense strategies to hopefully avoid trouble in the first place or prevail over it in the worst case. Knowledge about the responsibilities, legal constraints, and liabilities of owning/carrying a gun and the use of lethal force. Knowledge on how to develop your marksmanship and handling skills so you can effectively and safely use the weapon you bought.

While there is a ton of information out there, unfortunately a lot of it is truly awful. I’ve been studying this topic for my entire adult life and if I had a dollar for every stupid idea I’ve encountered I wouldn’t need to spend 2 bucks on a Powerball ticket to finally buy that private island I’ve had my eye on. My first choice for learning is, of course, high-quality training courses offered by competent instructors. Quality training is something everyone should seek out, but it’s not always possible to get into a good course immediately…and as a beginner you don’t really have the foundation to know the difference between quality training and goofy nonsense. So what I’m going to provide below are resources you can get your hands on right now to start building your personal defense foundation:

Fighting Smarter by Tom Givens: If you are new to this space, you should take the time to read some of my previous articles about Tom Givens. The short version is that after a career working as a police officer in Memphis, TN, (one of the most violent cities in America) Tom opened Rangemaster where he has taught tens of thousands of students from all over the world how to capably defend themselves…and to date dozens of his students have actually had to shoot a criminal aggressor and decisively prevailed. Tom has condensed the results of almost half a century of education and research into Fighting Smarter. It is, in my opinion, the best single resource available for building a reliable foundation in personal defense.

The Law of Self Defense by Andrew Branca is an excellent beginners guide to the laws governing self defense and the use of force.
The Law of Self Defense by Andrew Branca is an excellent beginners guide to the laws governing self defense and the use of force.

The Law of Self Defense by Andrew Branca: When I talk to people about self defense legal questions abound, but unfortunately there are a lot of utter morons out there offering ridiculous “legal advice” who haven’t the foggiest notion of what in blue hell they are talking about. Andrew Branca is an experienced attorney and certified gun guy (his IDPA number is 13) who knows legitimate self defense cases inside and out. (Specious self defense cases are a fairly common gambit among criminals and some attorneys have knowledge of self defense that is either defined entirely by those specious claims or have no experience with such cases at all) Andrew’s book does a splendid job of outlining the general principles of law behind self defense, and his followup seminars and online content offers highly specific information about laws and jurisprudence in your jurisdiction. Andrew’s work will answer just about every legal question you could possibly come up with related to the use of force in self defense…and having that knowledge makes it much more likely that you will manage a situation successfully. When you know the law you understand when you’re faced with a legitimate criminal assault and when you can take extreme action…like drawing your gun…in self defense. You don’t want to learn the limits of lawful use of force the hard way.

Pistol-Training.com: Pistol-Training.com is a website run by Todd Green…one of the best firearms instructors and coaches on the planet. His site is full of useful information on guns and training, including a number of great drills for building your skills and cheap, easy to use targets that I use at every range session. My personal favorite is the 3-Two-1 target which I use in a number of different drills to help push my ability to deliver accuracy at speed. I’ve also found the Dot Torture drill to be extremely useful in working on fundamental skills with new shooters or on my own. My skill level with a pistol is largely due to Todd’s influence and instruction over the years, so I recommend his site without reservation.

Active Response Training: This site is run by Greg Ellifritz, a full time police officer with training and experience in just about everything related to self defense that’s worth knowing. In addition to producing his own original and highly beneficial content, Greg links to some of the most useful content available on the web on the topics of self defense, fitness, unarmed combat, travel, and even developing useful social skills…meaning you could make Active Response Training your home page and learn something interesting and useful every time you visit Greg’s site. Greg doesn’t do Gawker-style clickbait crap like a lot of other blogs, and beyond that the man does incredible amounts of research before he opens his mouth on something. He’s like the exact opposite of what you expect from the internet and his site reflects that.

Pistol-Forum.com: Forums can be an incredible source of knowledge. I’ve used them extensively over the years to learn more about everything from solving computer operating system problems to installing an aftermarket stereo in my car. Unfortunately forums can also be populated by well-meaning people who really don’t know what they are talking about, and that’s the besetting sin of many gun related forums. Pistol-Forum.com does a better job of staying on the “incredible source of knowledge” side of the spectrum than most other forums you will find. The overall quality of the discussion is very good and there are a number of extremely knowledgeable and experienced people who share the benefit of their expertise on the site. If you’re looking for an interactive informational resource where your questions or concerns will be answered by at least half a dozen people who really know their stuff, Pistol-Forum is about as good as it gets. In addition to the online interaction, the forum holds seminars from time to time that provide access to incredible instructors at little or no cost to members of the forum. I’ve helped put on a few of these events and they seem to do folks a lot of good.

This is not an exhaustive list, of course, but the resources above are high quality and can be safely used to create your personal defense foundation. I’ve used them all extensively…and heck, I even helped build the last one specifically because I was interested in having a high quality resource where people could get together to learn instead of being perpetually assailed by idiocy or BS marketing. I’m certain all of them will serve you well, too.

Having a gun is great…but the gun is just a tool. Don’t just get a gun, arm yourself with the knowledge you need to go with it. The resources above will help you do that.

 

SIG SAUER® Releases SIG MPX® Carbine in 9mm

NEWINGTON, N.H. (January 13, 2016) — SIG SAUER, Inc., changed the way the world looked at the subgun with the introduction of the SIG MPX®, and now that same innovative technology is available to the consumer market in the semi-automatic SIG MPX Carbine.

SIG MPX-C

The modular 9mm SIG MPX Carbine maintains all of the ergonomic superiority of the short-barrel rifle and pistol variants, but now with a 16″ hammer-forged barrel. A full-length aluminum KeyMod handguard provides ample room for mounting lights, lasers and grips.

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Women and Concealed Carry: Solved

Carrying a gun is difficult. You have to do things like train with it, and put it on every day.

Actually, let me rephrase: carrying a gun properly is difficult.

Actually, let me rephrase: carrying a gun properly requires a modicum of work and people don’t like work.

shelley rae 870 fde

I carry a gun. I get up in the morning, I put on jeans and a tank top (yes, I often still wear tank tops in winter in South Dakota) and I put on my gun. If I’m wearing an outfit that doesn’t accommodate my appendix carry holster (I wear tank tops in the winter because I rock sundresses all summer) I use other forms of self-defense, like a knife or pepper spray.

I go to the range (on my days off, paying full price, thank you very much) a minimum of once a week and shoot my gun.

Boom. Concealed carry solved.

Instead, firearms trainers and marketers and shoppers have turned “concealed carry for women” into this whole convoluted thing where we can’t just pick out a gun and a holster that work for us and then go about our lives, so instead of TRAINING women obsess about “oh I have hips and boobs and my hands are whatever and I need something special” when really they just need to get a gun and a holster that work for them and then train and then put it on every day. Or not, and then have back ups, and then oh yeah train because that’s really what’s important.

We are conditioned from an early age that guns are manly and scary, then we get stuck in some class with a bunch of other women and we are told that because we are women we have all these special considerations and so we enter the world of firearms thinking that somehow having internal genetalia makes us carrying a gun COMPLICATED and we need all these special bullshit guns and products to compensate for the fact we can lactate when really we just need to find a gun we like and a holster we like and train just like everyone else.

I’m not saying we shouldn’t market to women or continue to develop products for them, I’m saying we need to stop making this more complicated than it needs to be. I, for one, overthink everything in life plenty enough without some dude standing over my shoulder asking if I can rack the slide on a 1911 and telling me about this awesome .380 that will FIT MY CURVES and the TOTALLY FASHIONABLE holster purse that he must’ve seen in GQ or something since he’s SO FASHIONABLE. I also don’t need some woman telling me that because I have a butt I need a special fricken holster as if no guy on the planet has ever done squats before.

Get a gun. Get a holster. Take a class. Wear your gun.

Problem. Solved.