Add armor and it doesn’t matter what caliber of handgun you’re shooting; armor stops it.I don’t recommend using that as a guide. Because lots of cops do blind mag dumps at suspects with zero attempts at aiming, it’s not really hard to believe it takes more rounds since very few likely hit the subject. If you remember the acorn hitting the roof video, don’t recall how many shots were fired…nobody hit who they thought was a threat. I don’t think it’s a secret most officers do their annual qualification and that’s it…I doubt those types are very skilled at shot placement.
One or two well placed 9mm SD rounds will certainly stop a subject, as will well placed .45 SD rounds. Add armor or some psycho narcotic and all bets are off regardless of caliber.
Something like that is snake oil.A .45 Auto FMJ will generally cycle reliably, make a big hole, and penetrate well for most defensive purposes. With the 9mm the design of the bullet provides the extra sauce — but, you have to hope that the expanding bullet design actually works as advertised when you need it to.
The .357 Magnum 125 grain has a very good reputation as a defensive round (which is probably why Sig spent the time and money to develop their .357 Sig).
If the shooter can handle the 10mm, then interesting choices become available. A lightweight bullet (135 or 155 grain) will travel reliably very fast (good). It will produce a 10mm hole (obviously marginally bigger than a 9mm but smaller than a .45), and if the bullet loaded is one of those new fangled solid flute type bullets, cycling should be as reliable as a FMJ, penetration should be very good as the bullet is a solid and won’t expand or fragment, and the wound cavity should be reliably good as there is no hollow point to clog, break apart, or just somehow not expand well.
Something like this should be in the running for the best all around defensive caliber/bullet weight/ bullet design:
https://underwoodammo.com/10mm-auto...n-solid-monolithic-hunting-self-defense-ammo/
Agreed. Again, .30 vs .22.Heard the same about the M-16 in the Nam…that 5.56 bullet would hit in the arm, travel up the bone and blow the shoulder off. Never saw that in combat. IMO, the AK round did more damage. Unfortunately, saw too many other Marines who had been shot, including some of my team. Story to that, for another time…Semper Fi.
Amen…When my wife and I visited the police training range at Lake of the Ozarks, MO (Open to the public on Sundays), and I instructed her on how to load and fire my large-frame S&W stainless 45acp model 4506 that I inherited from my Dad. She is "smaller" framed (much smaller than me), and on her first volley, she put all 10 rounds in the head of the silhouette target at 30'. I'll never forget the rangemasters comment to me after he witnessed her performance when he said "I wouldn't **** her off!", and of course I have always heeded those words in 47 years of marital bliss!!!
I actually prefer this round, 175mm out of a M107. The thought of a 147 Pound projectile leaving the muzzle at the same speed as a 147 grain bullet out of a M-14 always fascinated me. Not very accurate at charge 3 ( of powder) range, but I used them at 5-6 klicks and they were accurate enough for my purposes, killing NVA.
That’s one argument; and one that I tend to agree with. The vast majority of defensive gun uses end successfully with the caliber not being an issue whatsoever.For civilian carry: I believe any cartridge will do the job. Getting shot at will get someone running. That's what we want. The bad guy's behavior will change, and he'll run. Civilians don't need to STOP the guy and prevent him from getting away. Cops have that duty. We don't. I like the idea of the guy running away instead of bleeding or dying in my house. Let the police follow the blood trail. Carry anything you want. My EDC is a RIA M206 38 Spl handloaded with powder coated 158 gr LSWCs at 700 fps. I carry a speedloader on my belt.
I practiced with, competed with, and carried a Springfield 1911 for over 30 years and put 150,000+ rounds thru it. I've changed my mind about what's necessary for EDC after watching almost every post on the Active Self Protection youtube channel I don't have to believe the stories of keyboard warriors. I have seen what really happens.
agree with both of youThat’s one argument; and one that I tend to agree with. The vast majority of defensive gun uses end successfully with the caliber not being an issue whatsoever.
The other side, however, is what the dark pessimistic side of my brain whispers to me late at night—and that is, what happens when you deal with an assailant that just doesn’t care—reasons could be pharmacological, psychological, physiological; doesn’t really matter—and multiple shots aren’t going to be an option?
It’s gonna be one shot, quick, from the hip at best, no time to place it perfect?
It’s hard to argue that bigger isn’t better. “Energy dump” is hokum—what you want is a big, deep hole…
And in that realm, .45 is hard to beat.
Right?agree with both of you
Yup it’s a factI heard it from a gun expert that a 9mm will blow a lung clean out of a body.
I think you may be dismissing this type of bullet too quickly. What is attractive about this type of monolithic bullet is that even if it doesn’t perform magic, at least it feeds well and penetrates well — like FMJ. It is unlikely to fragment when it hits bone. If it can create a large wound cavity as well, then it would be a nice defensive choice.Something like that is snake oil.
Armed professionals run JHP’s, for good reason.
These bullets have been around for 10+ years. If they were as good as they claim, there’d be top-tier guys using them. They don’t.I think you may be dismissing this type of bullet too quickly. What is attractive about this type of monolithic bullet is that even if it doesn’t perform magic, at least it feeds well and penetrates well — like FMJ. It is unlikely to fragment when it hits bone. If it can create a large wound cavity as well, then it would be a nice defensive choice.
I am using the 90 grain in my .380s. Hollow points in .380s are unreliable (sometimes they expand ok and sometimes not). If they expand, generally the penetration is poor. A lot of folks just use FMJ in the .380 because they want the penetration (and reliable cycling). The Lehigh bullet gives you that plus the possibility of a good wound channel.