Hello all, here is today's article posted on TheArmoryLife.com. It is titled "Is Everything You Know About .40 Wrong?" and can be found at https://www.thearmorylife.com/is-everything-you-know-about-40-wrong/.
If you have the 9mm in one hand & the .45 in the other, it balances out to the .40I have shot the XD-40 and found it to be tame. For myself though , I just never saw the need for a .40 when I had the 9mm and the .45 ACP.
I have a .40 Shield with almost 7k rounds through it and use it for my EDC. If you are an experienced shooter you can handle the 40. I also have a 9m and Sig barrel that gives me access to ammo I can find. Living in the Chicago area I prefer the 40. The caliber and my shot placement gives me piece of mind (retired LEO).I have no experience with a .40, but I do with 9 mm and .45 in the S&W Shield. I find those soft shooting. Would I find the .40 soft shooting in a Shield instead of the article's much larger gun? Isn't the pressure higher with low to mid 30,000 psi? Isn't that more damaging to a gun? Just wondering.
Interesting article but some points I'd like to point out. First, .45 defensive loads are NOT typically 230 grains. Second is that bigger bullets do not always translate to "snappy" recoil. I kind of feel that most .45 rounds will PUSH rather than snap. The .45 round is not, I think harder to deal with than the .40 which is a decidedly smack rather than a push. As for 9mm the only real thing I think it has going for it is less, to none, recoil, less weight to carry all day, and more rounds which you shouldn't need anyway. Course I'm a dinosaur because I carry a 9MM in a 1911 Officer model. But only because of weight. At 79 every ounce counts. And of course, because I'm a dinosaur and perhaps soon to become extinct.Hello all, here is today's article posted on TheArmoryLife.com. It is titled "Is Everything You Know About .40 Wrong?" and can be found at https://www.thearmorylife.com/is-everything-you-know-about-40-wrong/.
Them: "It's short and weak!" Me: "Not according to the numbers." Them: "Wellllll, it's too snappy!" Me: "Well which is it?" And also, because 10mm is more powerful the 40 is thus weak?! (Sigh.) By that logic a 7mm Mag is "weak" because a 458 Lott is more powerful. SMDH.Right caliber but Short & Weak compared to the more capable relative.
I love that SD line, I have SD9 in gray frame.I have no issues with the .40, my current house gun is a S&W SD40VE, great gun, I have a few .40’s, my G27 is probably one of my favorites.
To be realistic though, any round will do in self-defense. Otherwise, an S & W 500 would be used causing criminal risk as it goes through the threat, the car, the school behind the car, and so on. I love the .40 cal round. Works fine. The point is to stop the action. This round does just fine doing the job as .380, 9MM, and others. You are likely not going to use more than 1 or 2 rounds in the .001% that you may need to defend yourself. Springfields are great weapons. Unfortunately, they make these in Croatia, so I prefer Glocks. It is a great design, but I have seen many a Springfield lock up from overseas mfg. Glocks never. ever. ever. fail. Nor do wheel guns. I have the latest Walther version of their .40 cal. Like that the most. In summer, a glock 27 gen 5 is easier to carry in a pocket holster. Just my opinion after 30 years of shooting and hunting.Interesting article but some points I'd like to point out. First, .45 defensive loads are NOT typically 230 grains. Second is that bigger bullets do not always translate to "snappy" recoil. I kind of feel that most .45 rounds will PUSH rather than snap. The .45 round is not, I think harder to deal with than the .40 which is a decidedly smack rather than a push. As for 9mm the only real thing I think it has going for it is less, to none, recoil, less weight to carry all day, and more rounds which you shouldn't need anyway. Course I'm a dinosaur because I carry a 9MM in a 1911 Officer model. But only because of weight. At 79 every ounce counts. And of course, because I'm a dinosaur and perhaps soon to become extinct.