VandaliaTactical wrote:Vandalia Tactical, like all other gun shops, cannot accept return of used holsters unless they are defective.
If gun shops accepted returns of holsters that show signs of wear and tear as when someone takes it home and wears it around the house or uses it for a CCW class and it's condition is apparent that it has been used, most of the holsters on the wall would be in used condition.
I personally looked at the holster involved in this thread and it was apparent that it had been used but not visually defective in any way. Holsters without thumbstraps are meant to be tight so the gun does not fall out. There are treatments for the inside of holsters if the gun seems to not slide in and out freely. Therefore, the return of this holster was denied. IT WAS A USED HOLSTER.
Kind of a catch-22 with this defect--If it is too tight initially, "needs to be broken in". If it is still a problem after breaking in, "It is a used holster". If I buy a cheap holster I must not know anything, and any problems with it must be my fault. I don't have a problem with "no returns unless defective", the argument is what is considered a defect.
I don't know if your staff didn't tell you what I'd told them--Since you did not even come out of your office to talk to me in person (I assume it was you that I saw the shop guy talking to in the office mezzanine ) and didn't bother to call the number I'd left with your staff, we won't know if you understood what I considered the defect to be. The holster was fine for the first hour or so I wore it each time. After a few hours, it was nearly impossible to draw. I don't mean a little stiffer, I mean I pulled hard enough to give myself a wedgie, and the gun remained holstered. If I twisted and wiggled the gun quite a bit I could finally get it loose. Even if there was something I could have changed in my drawstroke to improve the draw, there was no way to practice, since the draw was perfectly acceptable for an hour or so. It looked to me like the leather inside the mouth was soft, and over time it molded around the edge of the cylinder--there was an obvious scuff mark in one place. If you had suggestions to make it work, I'd have loved to hear them.
As for the sign on the wall at Vandalia Tactical stating that holsters are not returnable, that sign has been on the wall in the same place for over three years. it
OK, that's possible. I thought there was a different sign about keeping guns holstered in that spot, and that couldn't have been much more than 3 years ago, since that's when I bought my XD from you. I don't generally scour the walls for disclaimers.
is obvious why. There are people who purchase holsters on Friday for a CCW class then return it on Monday or Tuesday expecting a refund for a used holster. There are people who purchase a holster, use it, decide they don't like it or decide they made a bad decision and attempt to return the used holster. Then there are people who purchase a holster and expect to return it three months later.
None of that applies. I've had my CCW for a couple years, I probably wouldn't use the J frame for a class and if I did I've got a Hume JIT slide for it. If I could have the workmanship of the $20 Hume holster in a design similar to the $40 Tagua, I'd have been more than happy. It was about 3 weeks from purchase before I tried to return the holster--I was on vacation for two weeks, and didn't want to make a special 40+ mile round trip.
If you purchase a holster from Vandalia Tactical and return it in NEW CONDITION with all packaging within a reasonable amount of time you will usually receive a refund or store credit for the purchase price. I would never treat any customer with less respect than I would expect if I were their customer. Please do not, however, expect to return a used holster and expect a refund for it because it is not going to happen unless it is defective.
"If you purchase a holster and decide you don't want it before you use it, we might take it back. If you use it and it doesn't work, you are out of luck"
I didn't want a refund, I wanted credit towards a holster with a consistent draw, or some sort of suggestion to make it work.
A holster being tight does not make a defective holster.
Again, consistently tight isn't the problem--Tightening during wear to the point of not being able to draw is.
I would like to add that if you purchase a cheap holster or gun you get a cheap holster or gun. I suggest purchasing quality. Don't expect Galco quality in a cheap holster and don't expect Smith & Wesson or Glock quality in a cheap handgun. You only get what you pay for in life.
You carry a firearm to protect your life.
How much is your life worth?
Bill Jarrett, owner
How much are the lives of your customers worth? This defect is a particularly nasty one, and the equivalent to an intermittently unreliable gun.
Tagua sent a replacement holster--A lefty, with an added sticker saying "Ambidextrous". (worn as a right hand holster, the stitching will be rough side out) Both holsters will be sold with full disclosure for whatever I can get out of them.