Wise A wrote:
This is the part from the manufacturer that I find absolutely hilarious. We already have instances of .38 Spl and .45 ACP brass that's been shot so much, the headstamp's worn off. Why do we need anything that will last longer?
That is a question for the individual customer to decide.
Brass cases already work fine at pressures up to 65,000 PSI.
Not in 9mm they don't.
How can we justify needing anything stronger than that?
First of all, the manufacturer doesn't have to justify anything to you. They have to justify the product's existence and its claimed advantages in the marketplace. But since you have decided to adopt the rhetoric of the anti-gun groups:
* How do you "justify" needing a magazine that holds more than 10 rounds?
* How do you "justify" bullets that travel 4,000 fps and can turn flesh into jell-o?
But since you ask for one, the "justification" of stronger cases could be that once they exist guns can then be built capable of the higher performance that can come from exploiting the higher pressures a more durable case permits.
It's already damn hard to build a gun that can handle that kind of pressure.
Not really. It's hard to design a gun that will hold a brass cartridge case together long enough to survive extreme pressures, but that's not the same as building a gun to handle higher pressures. Once you have a case that can withstand higher pressures, materials capable of higher pressures could easily be employed in making a stronger gun.
And how can a stronger case help a cartridge, anyway? The limiting factor is the gun, not the cartridge.
No, the limiting factor
is the brass case. As temperature and pressures increase, the point at which the propellant gasses erode the case is easily reached. Let the stream of gasses get outside the cartridge and the gun will be damaged; possibly catastrophically.
It's not like if you have a really tough case, you can start banging Major 9 through an off-the-shelf pistol and expect it to maintain the same 30,000 - 75,000 round service life.
Nobody said anything about the service life of the pistol.
Nobody said anything about using the case at pressures higher than the gun was designed for.