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There was a lot of discussion recently on a previous thread re: the 9mm / .40S&W / .45ACP debate over pistol caliber vs. capacity for carry.

The following is a recent article from Gabe's newsletter that addresses this dilemma and brings up some good points and observations.

You may not agree...and the text is long...but it is worth time to read.

Magazine Capacity An Asset In A Gunfight

I suppose this will be yet another highly controversial issue, but what the heck. Controversy makes for interesting discussion, no? The issue is to look at whether high magazine capacity gives you a tactical advantage, or if we are better served by carrying an equally sized weapon with a smaller capacity of bigger bullets. Before I answer my own question, let me put forth some facts as seen both in force on force training and on the street.

Point One - Pistol bullets, regardless of caliber are all, what one colleague calls, "iffy". None can be guaranteed to drop an adversary in his tracks reliably. The notion of a one shot stop is an urban myth dreamed up by those with a vested interest in such things. I have seen 45s work and fail, and I have seen 9mm both work and fail. For the record, the only one shot drop (excluding head shots) I have ever seen with a pistol was fired by a good friend as we entered a crack house during a SWAT raid. He shot the bad guy squarely in the heart with 9mm +P+ out of a SIG P-226. He only fired once because the bad guy fell before my friend could reset his trigger for the next shot!

If we look at the three most prevalent calibers we see that there is very little difference between them. A 9mm (also .38/.357) is only one little millimeter smaller than the 10mm (aka .40 S&W), and that is only one little millimeter less than the vaunted 11mm (aka .45 ACP). And before we get into the high speed light bullet versus the heavy slow bullet argument, lets remember that you can only drive a pistol bullet so fast without drastically affecting its integrity. Moreover, since penetration is affected by weight, sacrificing weight for speed will not yield good results. Finally, you can only make a bullet so light or so heavy. There are limits to what you can shoot out of a pistol.

I have seen every one of these calibers fail at one time or another. There are those who disdain the 9mm as unsuitable for anything larger than squirrels. With modern ammunition, this is simply not true. There is also a myth and a cult grown up around the .45 ACP in this country. Sadly, it is not the deadly hammer of god its proponents suggest. This is not new. Read Fairbairn's Shoot To Live. He writes of two separate times when the .45 failed to work any better than anything else. Although one millimeter may give you a slight edge in a less than optimum body hit, under most circumstances, there will be very little difference between the effectiveness of the various calibers when modern anti-personnel ammo is used. Trauma injury doctors and reputable terminal ballistics experts tend to agree with this statement.

Point Two - Private Citizen CCW Operators do not go looking for trouble. If they are called to fight it is either because they have inadvertently crossed paths with bad guys while they are doing bad guy stuff (walking in on a robbery in progress as an example), or because they have been specifically targeted and stalked (such as a carjack, or home invasion event). They will have to use extreme violence to fight off the surprise attackers. When we translate the conversion of fright and startle into a firearm application we wee that definition is high volume of fire. You will shoot a lot, and until the threat is no longer there.

While these events share slightly different dynamics, the common thread often seen is that of multiple adversaries. The lone criminal or terrorist is an urban myth. If your fight only involves one, consider yourself lucky. More often than not you will be outnumbered.

Another point is the time frames in which these events take place. Think three seconds. After this, either you will be dead, or your adversaries will be dead. Urban gunfights do not go for hours. Unexpected, short duration, high intensity, extreme violence, multiple adversaries. That is the back drop.

Point Three - Our staff has collectively been in a large number of gunfights ranging from police, citizen, and military events. We draw on those experiences to set up mock gunfights in dynamic, unscripted force on force training drills. Although the surprise factor is missing (you generally don t know you will be in a gunfight until it is upon you), the dynamics of its evolution do not change much. Here are some other observations from watching hundreds of those drills.

1). Defenders will fire their weapons until the threat disappears. That means that until the role player falls down (simulating effective hits delivered), or runs away (removing the target), the good guy will keep firing. The concept of school solutions, controlled pairs, or otherwise artificially limiting the number of shots (as one does in a firing string on the range) does not hold up even in guys who've been extensively trained to do it.

2). When a training gun stops firing (due to running out of pellets), the shooter is still in the fight and still trying to shoot his enemy as well as trying to not be hit by him. We see them continue to try to work the trigger for one or two times before there is a realization that there has been a stoppage (malfunction or empty gun). This is followed by a visual examination of the gun, and only then is remedial action taken.

This can take upwards f a second and a half before anything is even attempted to fix the gun, and then the additional time needed to reload. Thus the idea that one can read the gun s feel and immediately realize a need to speed load simply does not hold up. Running out of ammo is usually a fight ender if there has been a failure to stop, or there are multiple adversaries at hand.

3). Participants in these reactive mock gunfights are debriefed immediately to get a clear picture of what happened before any rationalization takes place. Besides a shoot them to the ground firing process, most shooters do not remember seeing the crystal clear sight pictures they learned on the shooting range.

We see a great deal of point shooting, and gun index shooting. I have yet to see anyone strike a classic shooting posture and press off a carefully sighted pair in these room distance drills.

The point to remember is that in a fight such as what are likely for the private citizen, one can easily develop Bullet Deficit Disorder , and that this can have deleterious effects on the outcome of that fight.

The idea that a pair or trio of quality rounds carefully delivered onto a high scoring target zone will stop the action fails both the terminal ballistics test as well as the applications test.

A truth of gunfighting - Having more ammo immediately on board lessens the likelihood of ever needing to reload. Not needing to reload translates into more time delivering lead and less time manipulating the weapon. More trigger time increases likelihood of hitting, which increases survivability.

So the question is this. Given that there is a limit to the size pistol one can carry, do I want that pistol to hold more rounds? My answer is a strong YES!

Consider the similarly sized Glock 36 in .45 ACP, and the Glock 23 in .40 S&W. The latter holds nearly twice the ammo of the former in an almost identical package. The Glock 19 is an even more drastic comparison with 15 shots available. Of course there are also high capacity 45 pistols for those so inclined and for those who can wield them. I would argue that if your choice is a 45, a gun holding 13 would be better than a gun holding 6. And if your hand is too small for the 13 shooter, rather than decrease capacity, I d decrease caliber.

I have a colleague is South America who has been in High Risk Police Service for close to three decades. He has been in over three dozen verified gunfight . His weapon was originally a Browning Hi-Power and later a Glock 17.

I was very interested in hearing more so I asked him about the load he used. He said he had always used military ball full metal jacket. Astounded I asked him why he chose that. That is all we can get here. Hollow points are illegal .

I shook my head and told him that there was a belief in the USA that 9mm was an anemic caliber, especially in the load he d chosen. He shrugged and said that his adversaries must not have gotten the word. He said he fired a burst at the chest and if they didn't fall fast enough, he fired a burst at the face. He never needed to reload and had enough on board so if he missed a shot or two he could catch up in the fight. And before we hear the careful shooter versus the spraying prayer, this man is one of the best shots I have seen and competes on an international level. Even so, he knows the chaos in a gunfight can play havoc with even the most gifted marksman. Perhaps we need to take a lesson from him.

Me? I split the difference and carry a Glock 23 in .40 S&W. But I feel just as comfortable with a 15 shot 9mm.

While on the subject of Calibers

In variably one of the things asked by a prospective gunman, right after he decides which type of pistol to buy and carry, is what caliber should he get. In fact, you would be hard pressed to pick up any gun-related magazine and not see at least one article relating to ammunition and caliber choices.

Some instructors are also very caliber-focused, thinking that anyone who does not bring a 45 to class is unarmed. One student of mine who carries a 9mm was recently told that his 9mm was simply a 45 set on "stun". (The commentator however, declined to be stunned.). So what should you do when trying to decide on calibers/loads, etc.? In a previous article we discussed the attribute of magazine capacity. Here we will discuss the characteristics of each caliber and give you some information so you can make up your own mind.

Issue Number One - Shootability.

I had a student come to class with a Glock 29 in 10mm. My philosophy is that students should bring whatever they want to carry, and that was his choice. The only problem was this gent weighed about 125 pounds, and was arthritic in both wrists. To make matters worse, he'd bought 500 rounds of the heaviest most powerful T-Rex stopping loads he could find in the caliber. To make a long story short, he ended up shooting the rest of the class with my Glock 17. That caliber/weapon combination may have made a fine choice for a larger and stronger man, but for him it was totally unusable.

The caliber choice must be first predicated on the reality of your physical condition. Can you shoot the thing? Can you train with it? If you wince in pain every time you fire that Dino-killer in training, you will never be able to use it well in a fight. Be honest with your self. Let your intellect and not your ego select your caliber.

Issue Number Two - Delivery Envelope.

Some students in my classes live and work in certain social circles where the pistol must not only be concealed, it must be covert. This means that weapon selection is as important as anything else. For them, an HK USP may be a fine weapon, but they will never carry it. Selecting a smaller weapon that will always be there may be a better choice.

There are small, large caliber weapons out there, but remember Issue Number One - how shootable is it for you. My friend with the super-charged Glock 29 was trying unsuccessfully to kill both issues with one choice. If you must carry a smaller weapon, and shootability issues are present, do not feel impotent because you had to decrease caliber size.

Issue Number Three - Availability.

By now we are entering the Hurricane season again and the memory of Katrina lies lightly on the minds of those who live in the Southeast. Natural disasters and riots can occur at any time. We are assuming that you will have your CCW pistol as a first line of defense until you can obtain something else. In the event you cannot get to your survival stash, you may need to resupply from regular sources.

If you carry a .357 SIG, or a 45 GAP, or any other new, non-mainstream caliber, do you think you will find the ammo you need? When I travel, I carry a Glock 17 in 9mm. Why? Because if my ammo does not arrive with my luggage (the illusion of security), I can always find 9mm. Perhaps not a huge issue but still something for consideration.

Issue Number Four - Effects On Target

This is where all the bullet salesmen come out and discuss amateur terminal ballistics. Listen folks - hundreds of thousands of people, both good guys and bad guys, have been killed with pistol shots in the last few decades. I will bet the majority of those have been shot with 9mm. Why do I say that? Because I travel all over the world to teach good guys how to prevail in gunfights and invariably the caliber of availability is 9mm.

"How on earth do they get past the fact that the 9mm is anemic and will bounce off a leather jacket?", someone may ask. Truth be told, they shoot the bad guys until they either fall down or run away. Usually it is the former. Its only here in the USA that we are so fixated on this issue of one or two shots.

We may hear all manner of arguments about the one caliber or another being the only true choice, but I will tell you that no single caliber will be the best choice for everyone. Heck, some people are better served with a caliber like 22 LR due to physical limits from advanced age or injury!

All calibers can fail, and have failed. When you look at the issues scientifically a 9mm or a .38 Special is approximately .357. A 40 S&W is 10mm. And a 45 ACP is 11mm. So could it be that we have basically one or two little millimeters separating "T-Rex Stopper" from "Merely Adequate", or "Anemically Inadequate"? Yes that is exactly right.

Let me put it in a different perspective. A student of mine who works for a narcotics Unit in the south recently reported in. He told me that he and his guys had gotten in a gunfight with a violent drug dealer. Our student shot the bad guy once with a shotgun loaded with Federal Tactical Slugs. (Slugs incidentally are about .72 caliber and are suggested as anti-bear insurance in Alaska ). The shotgun slug entered the right side of the bad guy's chest from about the 2:00 and exited through the back at about the 8:00 .

Nice shot. However, the bad guy not only kept fighting, but stole a car and evaded the pursuing police officers into a wooded area. A week later, the bad guy's attorney arranged for him to turn himself in. He was alive and well, albeit injured. Does anyone want to tell me how deadly their pistol round is now?

So select the size of your pistol first and foremost. Base it on what you need to carry it 24-7-365. That means all the time. Select a caliber that is easily obtained, and shootable for you. And finally, train to hit and keep hitting until the threat has gone away (one way or the other). A hit with a 9mm is far better than a marginal hit or a miss with a caliber you cannot control.


Kerry
 

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I've learned that the current ammunition is so much better today that it doesn't really matter if you get a 9mm. .40, or .45. I actually learned a lot during the week I went to Firearm's instructor school, especially the part towards the end where we had some fun competitions. I had my S&W .45 and a female officer had a 9mm and she wopped my ass shooting some speed drills at some steel targets. For every 1 shot that I took, she took 2 and she had a much higher magazine capacity. The funny thing was that the instructors actually told us not to be surprised if the guys with the 9mm wooped everyone's ass. They were right.

I understand that the .45 may be better penetrating a windshield, but the chances of anyone actually shooting at a car is much less than shooting at a person. If given a choice, I think I would choose the 9mm with the higher capacity mags over the .45 with the lower magazine capacity.
 

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Guys, let's keep this thread on topic. This is one of those topics that can be very informative, so keep it to a pistol caliber vs. magazine capacity topic. Feel free to start a diferent thread if you want to branch off of this one.
 

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Gabe has bin one of the supporters of the hi cap 9mm golck for a long time now i respect him or this but i have always bin in disinterment with him on this fore several resins however biest they may be so here they are

#1 yes having more rounds may be good but as some one that is forced to use ball rounds by ucmj i want 8-14 rounds of .45 over 15 rounds of 9mm i have seen how 9mm ball effects everything from people to wild dogs dogs tbh our silenced .22 worked better at dog control at hide sights then our 9mms did.

#2 I find a .45s rolling recoil more controllable then a 9mm i do not like the snap of the ultra fast handgun i have a farly small SIG P245 and i can handle it better then my friends kar sub compact 9mm he uses fore his cc gun

#3 My Civilian hand gun is not a mane method of self defense it is #1 a time maker til i can get to my rifle at my house #2 a backup if my long arm goes down or #3 A small consolable method of self defense while I am out and about if i need more then the 3 6 round SIG mags i have on me or the 3 8 round 1911 mags if i am carrying my 1911 instead ( I use the 1911 if i am going sum place where i feel more threat then normal) something has rely gone wrong.

#4 My Army Side arm is just back up if my other guns go down and there is nothing elts left and this means the $&^t has hit the fan and the day is probably over. In all thees situations i would rather have a .45 would rather have the bigger bang flash and hole the bug round makes do not necessarily have time to be shooting 1 man til he goes down i would be shooting 1man 1 or 2x then switching to the next closest target till I am either dead or have taken them all out If i run out of ammo i have my knife and 1 frag saved for a last stand becos if you are being over run no mater how much ammo you have in a hand gun you are doomdickeyed.

and #4 this one is more of a funny thing but Even the German army the ones that invented the 9mm have now switched to USP 45s
If the makers of the round can no longer stand its failings in combat why should i :D There .45s hold 14 rouns

but ofc if you can only handle a 22short use it a hit with a 22 short is better then a miss with a 50cal
 

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He makes some good points but you won't see me shelving my .45's any time soon. I can shoot them better than any 9mm or .40 and our Federal Tactical 230gr +P ammo pushes 950 to 970 from my 5" Operator. The recoil of the .45 is more like a push instead of the snap of a .40 or a 9mm. Since receiving a replacement HK45 I have been putting it through it's paces and I have to say I am very impressed. Low recoil, even with the +P ammo, is fairly gentle and it is accurate, reliable, and fun to shoot. What's really fun is to give a cop who has only shot Glocks a 1911 or an HK USP or HK45 and let them shoot a mag. They are much more accurate and pleasant to shoot, the triggers are much smoother, and they are amazed how much better they shoot. We've had several officers switch to 1911's, XD's, and HK's and all of their qualifying scores rose by 10 to 20 points.

If you want a hi cap .45 look at:

1. HKUSP- 12 rounds
2. HK45- 10 rounds
3. Glock 21- 13 rounds
4. Springfield XD- 14 rounds
5. FNH FN45- 14 and 15 rounds (This is a new comer but the one I have works very well and has low recoil and is very smooth.)

Anyway, this isn't intended as Glock bashing because I own several of them, too, including a 9mm model 19, but Glock and high capacity isn't the only game in town. As I have stated before, go with the gun and caliber you shoot the best and train.
 

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I also chose the .40 as a happy medium. I like the .45 as far as stopping power goes, but I found the trajectory atrocious for a generic carry round (though if I knew I would only have engagements inside of 25yds, the .45 would be my choice). The 9mm has a nice trajectory, but possibly a year or so before i started looking into a pistol, two Baton Rouge police officers attempted to arrest a suspect who was on PCP. There was a physical confrontation which led to the officers shooting the suspect. In the end, each officer shot two mags worth of 9mm into the suspect before he went down (shortly thereafter, BRPD switched to the Glock 22). For me, the .40 seems the best overall choice in terms of calibre when dealing with unknown confrontations, and most pistols made for that calibre have a fairly high mag capacity (my sig 2022 has a 12+1 capacity, and it's a compact, wifey's Glock 22 holds 15+1).
 

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Discussion Starter · #9 ·
rcrandall said:
If you want a hi cap .45 look at:

1. HKUSP- 12 rounds
2. HK45- 10 rounds
3. Glock 21- 13 rounds
4. Springfield XD- 14 rounds
5. FNH FN45- 14 and 15 rounds (This is a new comer but the one I have works very well and has low recoil and is very smooth.)
Add:

6. Taurus 24/7 Pro .45 - 13 Rounds

If you haven't tried one...do so... before dismissing it. My money says you will come away impressed. No better value out there in a hi-cap .45ACP.

BTW, Taran Butler broke the Steel Challenge record using a standard iron sight 24/7 Pro hitting four 12" steel targets at 30 ft… in 97 hundredths of a second.

Kerry
 

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DocGKR
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: Palo Alto, CA
Posts: 785
Corbon DPX 9mm, .40 S&W, .45 ACP duty ammo vs. Fed HST as control
9mm Corbon 115 gr +P Barnes XPB JHP; ave vel=1229 fps (G19); gel cal= [email protected]
BG: pen=14.8", RD=0.54", RL=0.48", RW=115.1gr
4LD: pen=15.1", RD=0.54", RL=0.49", RW=115.4gr

9mm Fed 147 gr HST JHP; ave vel=997 fps (G19)
BG: pen=14.6", RD=0.61", RL=0.39", RW=147.1gr
4LD: pen=15.6", RD=0.56", RL=0.53", RW=145.5gr

115 gr +P XPB vs. 147 gr HST--BG top/4LD bottom:

.40 S&W Corbon 140 gr Barnes XPB JHP; ave vel=1207 fps (S&W 4006); gel [email protected]
BG: pen=12.6", RD=0.64", RL=0.49", RW=140.1gr
4LD: pen=11.5", RD=0.64", RL=0.49", RW=141.1gr

.40 S&W Fed 180 gr HST JHP; ave vel=959 fps (S&W 4006)
BG: pen=14.0", RD=0.70", RL=0.43", RW=181.2gr
4LD: pen=15.0", RD=0.56", RL=0.52", RW=180.7gr

140 gr XPB vs. 180 gr HST--BG top/4LD bottom:

.45 ACP Corbon 160 gr Barnes XPB JHP; ave vel=1101 fps (1911); gel [email protected]
BG: pen=13.9" RD=0.66", RL=0.43", RW=159.7gr
4LD: pen=13.2", RD=0.64", RL=0.46", RW=160.1gr

.45 ACP Corbon 185 gr +P Barnes XPB JHP; ave vel=1097 fps (1911); gel [email protected]
BG: pen=16.8" RD=0.65", RL=0.51", RW=185.3gr
4LD: pen=16.5", RD=0.66", RL=0.51", RW=185.9gr

.45 ACP Fed 230 gr +P HST JHP; ave vel=996 fps (1911)
BG: pen=12.2", RD=0.85", RL=0.41", RW=230.5gr
4LD: pen=14.6", RD=0.69", RL=0.46", RW=230.7gr

.45 ACP Fed 230 gr HST JHP; ave vel=906 fps (1911)
BG: pen=14.2", RD=0.76", RL=0.51", RW=230.4gr
4LD: pen=14.2", RD=0.73", RL=0.46", RW=230.6gr

.45 ACP Fed 230 gr +P HST JHP; ave vel=996 fps (1911)
BG: pen=12.2", RD=0.85", RL=0.41", RW=230.5gr
4LD: pen=14.6", RD=0.69", RL=0.46", RW=230.7gr
Reply With Quote
http://m4carbine.net/showthread.php?t=26390

I like the .85 expansion of the 45 a lot more then the .61 max for the 9mm allso
 

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owenslee said:
BTW, Taran Butler broke the Steel Challenge record using a standard iron sight 24/7 Pro hitting four 12" steel targets at 30 ft… in 97 hundredths of a second.

Kerry
Having shot a fair bit of steel with literally the best in the world, I completely disregard ANYTHING to do with steel competitions that try to make comparisons to self defense.

Steel is a game that rewards the people that can shoot the most the fastest. They get that by shooting ammo that barely exits the gun, and run the lightest load they can. I've seen the bullets hit 12" low at 20 yards on the long targets.

I also get some crap from them for taking my single stack 1911 loaded to the gills tossing brass 30 feet. Do I care? No, not one bit. And I've managed to get off 5 shots against 5 different targets in under 5sec. World class? Not on your life, but fast enough for me with +P loaded .45. I've also double tapped IPSC targets in the head at close range, fast enough that both cases were in the air at the same time, and had both rounds impact in the head area of the target, about 2" apart. Then I repeated the same feat 10 feet away with another. When asked why I did that, I replied "because I can".

I use steel as practice, not as a game. I care not where I place. I have the occasional failure to feed properly - especially when my kimber has more than about 400 rounds through it with no cleaning. Its taught me to clean the weapon after every shooting session to eliminate carbon build up. Its taught me how to respond to a failure to feed quickly. And taught me that even in good conditions I can still fuckup - I've not seated a mag all the way, and also failed to reload all 4 mags between stages. Its taught me that no matter how many times I've shot, I will always need more practice.

Gabe is focusing too much on details, and not enough on the important part: practice. Kyle Lamb states that your intended target is the size of two tennis balls on opposite ends of an 18" piece of rebar. The only way you're going to hit that consistently is to practice. Once you're there, and can do it under stressful conditions, you have to be using a weapon that can reach those areas (ie: penetrate far enough to hit them). That will rule out things like a .22 or .25acp. Maybe even a .380.

If you can hit the target (not the assailant/perp, but his CNS) in stressful conditions, then gabe's argument becomes important. But really, how many of us can hit the CNS reliably under stressful conditions, even you active shooters?
 

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Discussion Starter · #12 ·
snort said:
owenslee said:
BTW, Taran Butler broke the Steel Challenge record using a standard iron sight 24/7 Pro hitting four 12" steel targets at 30 ft… in 97 hundredths of a second.

Kerry
.... I completely disregard ANYTHING to do with steel competitions that try to make comparisons to self defense.
Where was a reference made comparing Taran Butler's record to self defense?

It was a reference to the performance of a specific weapon and shooter in a competitive event...nothing more.

Kerry
 

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owenslee said:
snort said:
owenslee said:
BTW, Taran Butler broke the Steel Challenge record using a standard iron sight 24/7 Pro hitting four 12" steel targets at 30 ft… in 97 hundredths of a second.

Kerry
.... I completely disregard ANYTHING to do with steel competitions that try to make comparisons to self defense.
Where was a reference made comparing Taran Butler's record to self defense?

It was a reference to the performance of a specific weapon and shooter in a competitive event...nothing more.

Kerry
Speaking of competitive events, any of you seen Jerry Miculik put down 12 rounds from a revolver in under 3 sec?


That still awes me. I can't load my auto that fast.
 

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In pistol classes, hicap handgun shooters using Glocks, or other hicap 9mm's, obviously are doing less reloads than the 1911 shooters (me). In fact the instructors in my class explain the drill and point out the Glock shooters will execute 1 reload, and 1911 shooters will have to figure in 2-3 reloads depending on misses. So I get more practice doing reloads, and the Glock shooters, well they get to keep shooting. :)
 

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I have shot a .44 mag a lot and can rip off 6 rounds pretty quickly. I have also shot 9s, .40s, .45s, and .22s. The 9s and .40s have a sharp recoil to them compared to the .45 and I can shoot the .45 more accurately than even the .22 when shooting for speed.

Granted I do not have experience of facing an armed advesary but I do know that I am comfortable and confident in my choice of carry gun. I have moved from a .357 mag to a 1911 .45 to an EAA Witness in .45 to a XD .45. Each move increased the number of rounds on tap and while there is a quality in quantity it is not the end all, be all.

Practice is extremely important and the best shooters be they civilian, LE, or military are those who practice. If you can have more rounds on tap and put them where they need to go that only improves your chances of coming out on top. Putting them where they need to go is the most important item.

While there was the example of the guy getting shot with a shotgun slug and surviving there are also cases of lots of people dieing from being shot one time with a .22 or .25. Your opponent and their mindset has a lot to do with the terminal performance of your rounds, perps on PCP or other drugs are hard to stop with any caliber rifle or handgun.

As I can't carry a concealed shotgun or rifle I opt to carry a large capacity .45.
 

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dark1 said:
Gabe has bin one of the supporters of the hi cap 9mm golck for a long time now i respect him or this but i have always bin in disinterment with him on this fore several resins however biest they may be so here they are

#1 yes having more rounds may be good but as some one that is forced to use ball rounds by ucmj i want 8-14 rounds of .45 over 15 rounds of 9mm i have seen how 9mm ball effects everything from people to wild dogs dogs tbh our silenced .22 worked better at dog control at hide sights then our 9mms did.

#2 I find a .45s rolling recoil more controllable then a 9mm i do not like the snap of the ultra fast handgun i have a farly small SIG P245 and i can handle it better then my friends kar sub compact 9mm he uses fore his cc gun

#3 My Civilian hand gun is not a mane method of self defense it is #1 a time maker til i can get to my rifle at my house #2 a backup if my long arm goes down or #3 A small consolable method of self defense while I am out and about if i need more then the 3 6 round SIG mags i have on me or the 3 8 round 1911 mags if i am carrying my 1911 instead ( I use the 1911 if i am going sum place where i feel more threat then normal) something has rely gone wrong.

#4 My Army Side arm is just back up if my other guns go down and there is nothing elts left and this means the $&^t has hit the fan and the day is probably over. In all thees situations i would rather have a .45 would rather have the bigger bang flash and hole the bug round makes do not necessarily have time to be shooting 1 man til he goes down i would be shooting 1man 1 or 2x then switching to the next closest target till I am either dead or have taken them all out If i run out of ammo i have my knife and 1 frag saved for a last stand becos if you are being over run no mater how much ammo you have in a hand gun you are doomdickeyed.

and #4 this one is more of a funny thing but Even the German army the ones that invented the 9mm have now switched to USP 45s
If the makers of the round can no longer stand its failings in combat why should i :D There .45s hold 14 rouns

but ofc if you can only handle a 22short use it a hit with a 22 short is better then a miss with a 50cal
+1 on the .45 I think Gabe should read more stories on our boys over in Iraq. In the last 6 months Ive read sereval stories in solider of fortune magazine about our guys not putting the Al Queda down with thier M9's and whising for their 1911's.

And dont forget about the Para Ordnance in .45 high cap mags. They make sereval cc in 12 and 13 round mags in .45. I carry a Nite-Tac LDA P14 myself and love it. They slimmed down the mag well abit and doesnt feel that bulky at all, since that has been a man complaint.

Anyways not to take away from Gabes message great info and like the other posts he has done, so keep them coming Kerry!
 

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If ball ammo was all that was available I'd rather have 45 over the 9mm. When you have modern defensive ammo available, the gap between the 9mm and 45acp closes considerably. I think that's when Gabe Suarez' opinions really carry weight.

Then tonight I was channel surfing and found one of the police reality shows. The show had video of an extremely angry suspect who was high on crystal meth. This guy was berzerk, yelling and screaming in demon possessed like temper tantrums and couldn't calm down no matter what. This guy probably wouldn't notice the first shot if you had to defend yourself against him, so bigger bullets or more bullets?

Some of you LE officers, what have you encountered in situations like this?
 

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Whats 1 or 2 millimeters between friends !?!

bigger or smaller it dont matter if you dont hit something vital!!

For some reason I doubt that 2 millimeters will make a whole lot of difference in hitting a vital organ, but an extra few rounds certainly could. add to that the effect of being hit in different places by multiple rounds too. the choice seems pretty logical to me.

We always hear those stories about some guys buddy who shot some towel head with his M9 and took forever to put him down, BUT you NEVER hear where those shots hit him. Evidently the fella lived to tell the story, so maybe those extra 5 rounds in the mag made the difference between life and death for him.

Anecdotal stories unfortunate as it may be, dont carry the same validity as lab test results. If we could do an autopsy on the shot placement then we could use those to show a trend. The physician reported results on gunshot wounds all point to the same thing... Shot placement is more important than caliber, and there is not a substantial difference in the wounds from pistol rounds.

the 45 aint some magical laser pistol that puts down bad guys with one round. Shot placement will always be THE SINGLE factor in determining how well a round makes an attacker react.

Hell I remember a vietnam vet telling me how when he ran out of rifle ammo at Da Nang and was being rushed by some BG, he had to empty his 45 into the guy and ONLY after he had used up his last round did the guy fall. I'll bet good money he'd have given about anything at that moment to have another 7 rounds in the mag :wink:

There's almost no way I could talk a 45 devotee out of his caliber. it takes an epiphany to get it. it's an American caliber and it's been entrenched into our society and psyche for almost 100 years. I still harbor a lot of respect for the 45 myself. There is just something about shooting it that feels different. I still keep a 45 around too, but I really like the platform it's in. I still get 10 rounds in the mag and pistol that fits my hand as well as a glock 19.

My heart may say 45, but my head says 9 is fine.
 

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Another salient point that bears pointing out.

Whne you stab or shoot someone and do not hit the central nervous system it takes several minutes at a minimum for them to die. During that time they can still fight back and flee as well. you may have killed them, but they just dont know it yet. :twisted:

I beleive that even a hit to the heart takes 25 or more seconds to kill. That could seem like a long time during a fight. How long did the last deer you shot take to fully expire?

perception isn't always fact.
 

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I think we have to understand and separate the differences between using ball ammo and Hollow-point ammo. I agree that if I was using Ball ammo, such as the milirtary uses, I would definitely prefer a .45, no matter what.

Now when you talk about Hollow-points, then they all perform comparably. If you prefer a slow, heavy bullet, then get a .45. If you prefer a fast, light bullet, get a 9mm. Or you can split the different and get a .40. We carry M&P .45's at work and I like them alot. If we were issued M&P 9mm or .40's, I would care either.
 
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