The 10mm is also popular in the West for defensive use in areas with large 4-legged carnivores.Now if I lived in Alaska, then I might need a 10mm.
The 10mm is also popular in the West for defensive use in areas with large 4-legged carnivores.Now if I lived in Alaska, then I might need a 10mm.
Finding ammo can be a biggie right now. Have only seen one single 50 rnd box of 10mm in over a year. Nice part was only $10 at LGS. Finding .327 ammo and it's variants is or has been easier.I've been curious about 10mm for awhile, but I'm hesitant to take on a new cartridge. I like to keep at least 500 rounds of any cartridge that I shoot frequently. That got expensive to maintain during the worst parts of the ammo shortage.
I'd actually like to downsize by a few calibers. I only have a couple .40 S&W handguns, one .308 rifle, and one 30-30 rifle. Those are the calibers I'm most likely to eliminate, but I'm too fond of a few of those guns to make the leap. At this rate I'll consider myself lucky if I can avoid buying a .327 Federal revolver or levergun.
The Polar bear threat in Ohio isn't what it used to be......... But i just love the way the hotter 10mm rnds feel in the 1911 platform.. But yea...it's a range toy..I have a .44 Mag, several .357s, and several more .45ACPs. Do I need a 10mm? No. Do I want one? Not particularly. Just "another mouth to feed." If I wanted another 1911 chambering, I'd play with .38 Super, which looks like fun.
Now if I lived in Alaska, then I might need a 10mm.