Yeah, I know. My question was rhetorical......my point being that a proper well-made holster is all the retention you need.drjoker wrote:Your holster with a lever is a "retention" holster. Also, some holsters require you to tilt your gun forward before drawing it. That's also a "retention" holster. Or a holster that requires pushing a button such as Blackhawk Serpa. It's just fancy schmancy "marketing".The Annoyed Man wrote:What is "retention"?
A thumb break or snap strap with a lanyard should be fine.
"Retention", like "safeties", occurs primarily in the brain. Just as your gun's best safety is between your ears, your holster's best retention is in your situational awareness. A well made holster will retain a pistol from falling out accidentally, even if held upside down, because it FITS the gun PROPERLY. The two holsters I have with thumbsnaps are well made proper holsters, but neither provides any more retention than my custom-made holster from Eric Hopp which fits my gun perfectly. The holster with the lever (a Safariland Model 578 GLS™ Pro-Fit™) does not provide significantly more retention than either of those two thumbsnap holsters do. Why? Because [A] any idiot planning on trying to take the gun can SEE the lever and understand that it needs to be actuated in order to remove the gun; and that idiot STILL has to penetrate my situational awareness to accomplish his goal.
At some point, retention devices begin to intrude on your own ability to draw your gun if you need to. All of this noise about retention holsters is just one reason why, as a general thing, concealed carry is superior to open carry. If you're that scared that someone can take your gun, maybe you should consider not letting him know you HAVE a gun.
My answer is: [A] you made the decision to carry a firearm worth from several hundred to several thousand dollars out in the open; therefore don't be a cheapskate on your holster choices; and [C] DON'T assume that spending money on gadgets will make up for your own personal shortcomings in paying attention to what is going on around you.
Buy a retention holster if you want, but understand that in the end, retention happens between your ears, not in your choice of gadgetry.