Massad Ayoob: One-Handed Reload Tactics
Editor’s Note: Massad Ayoob has been teaching one-hand only reloads in emergencies to police since the early 1970s and to law-abiding armed citizens in advanced courses since the early 1980s. This article is intended to be purely informational. These methods are best practiced with unloaded pistols and dummy ammunition. It is recommended that they not be done with live ammunition, and with close supervision by experienced, qualified instructors.
Picture a worst-case scenario: Someone is trying to murder you or your loved ones. You’ve been able to return fire with your autopistol, but the problem is still immediately ongoing … and you run out of ammo and have to reload to continue your desperate fight for survival … and, injured, you have only one hand to fight with!
Having taught this sort of thing for more than 40 years and learning all I could from multiple top instructors, here’s the best I have to offer. I think it can best be done in step-by-step pictography. We’ll address right-hand and left-hand methods as opposed to “dominant and non-dominant hand” simply because most autoloading pistols were designed for the right-handed majority of users.
Reloading with One Hand Only, Right Hand
Reloading with One Hand Only, Left Hand
Additional Considerations
If you have a second pistol accessible to the hand that’s still working, grabbing it and deploying it will probably be faster than struggling with the one-hand reload.
You may be carrying in a shoulder holster or something that precludes using a belt holster to hold the gun while you are reloading. The same will be true if you had to draw a gun that was just stuffed in the waistband, or grabbed from a drawer or gun safe in an emergency.
I’ve run across actual cases where wounded officers were able to successfully reload one-handed and win the fight when they couldn’t, or didn’t think to, use their holster to stabilize the gun. One cop put his empty pistol on the hood of his patrol car, butt upward, and successfully reloaded, re-entered the fight, and won. Another did the same putting to top of his locked-open slide on the pavement in front of him where he had fallen, and prevailed.
Some have taught putting the gun between the knees. This, of course, destroys mobility and also allows the risk of the magazine’s insertion pushing the gun in such a way that the slide release lever is activated and closes the gun on clothing, creating a hellacious jam.
However, at one school, Bill Rogers’, the between the knees one-hand reload is taught with the historical element of being seated. Bill points out that in the Battle of Mogadishu when American fighting men were racing through city streets in vehicles under heavy fire, many wounded soldiers were able to return fire while seated by placing their 9mm service pistols between their thighs. The top of the slide being supported by the vehicle seat made this method quite viable. Rogers teaches his students to perform this technique effectively in his Advanced course.
Conclusion
Being down to an empty gun and a wounded arm does not mean you will lose the gunfight. With the proper mindset and training, you can overcome this situation and survive. Just be prepared.
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