As opposed to behind the hip?
It's just something I've always noticed when carrying a revolver. In front of the hip ISWB seems to be more comfortable than behind the hip ISWB.
Common? A pistol always feels better behind my hip.
As opposed to behind the hip?
It's just something I've always noticed when carrying a revolver. In front of the hip ISWB seems to be more comfortable than behind the hip ISWB.
Common? A pistol always feels better behind my hip.
My 340m&p with a titanium cylinder in a darkstar gear appendix holster is stupid easy to carry.https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/201...22163c07fe.jpg
I ask because I got a nice ISWB holster for my 3 inch GP100 from Falco. I expected it to work best behind my hip like my pistols but it seems to be more comfortable in front at 2:00-2:30.
Conceal-ability is a little better behind the hip, though. In the front is makes a bit of a bulge (with a cover shirt) It will not conceal with just a T-shirt.
I'd rather have the cylinder pressing on my abdomen than my sciatic nerve.
In my case my paunch precludes AIWB carry with revolvers. I carry 3 oclock OWB.
After carrying around the GP100 a bit I'm pleasantly surprised how comfortable it is. (Behind the hip) Seated in a car is just fine. (any gun carried behind the hip gets tiresome in a car after 45 min or so though)
Sure it's a little heavy (39 oz loaded) but somehow pretty comfortable. Perhaps it's the way the all-leather Falco holster distributes the weight?
I think it also has to do with the Ruger Compact GP100 grip. It's fairly narrow, curved, and smooth. The rubber outer parts will catch on an over shirt more than a polymer or all-wood grip but I was already aware of that.
The gun isn't going to be a daily carry piece but I want to get some time with it before taking it out in the woods/travelling. That is it's purpose. Also, the trigger is really good!
Yes.
I have carried a:
3" 686 (L frame)
2 5/8" 657 (N frame, 41 mag)
2 1/4" 649 (J frame)
As others have said, all that weight pushing on your sciatic nerve will start to cause discomfort, pain, or even long term issues. After years of carrying OWB at 4 O'clock, I can't do it anymore. After an hour my sciatic nerve is on fire and I have to ditch the gun or face back problems.
In addition to pushing on the nerve, a short barrel with heavy frame will cause the frame/grip of the gun to rotate out and away from the body, whereas a longer barreled gun, the barrel will stabilize the weight of the frame and keep the gun vertical. AIWB prevents this from happening, the gun seems to carry more snug to the body.
After I made the switch to AIWB, my life has changed completely. Even a big N frame carries much easier than it used to, no longer does the gun bite into my back when seated, and the snubby barrels don't bite into my junk. Anything more than a 3" gun would be pushing it for me AIWB, but all of the guns listed above carry like a dream AIWB vs traditional OWB 3-4 O'clock.
When I carry a short barrelled revolver its always AIWB.