Careful, with the recommendations coming out of 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, the preferred LEO round may soon be the 32 S&W Long due to it's accuracy potential and low recoil being perfect for knee shots and minimizing the risk of death for peaceful offenders!
Who said that revolvers wouldn't make a comeback!
Most of the agencies in the county I live in use 40 S&W.
Ammo companies don't make "concerted efforts to kill" anything. They make what calibers are in demand.
And all the 40 S&W pistols out there will still require ammo.
And you would expect 9mm to cost less to make.
A 9mm round uses less lead, less brass, and less powder than a 40 s&w round. The selling price has to reflect the cost of manufacture in the long run.
I might agree with them about the .45 GAP; not sure about the rest of them.
Precisely....
These gun rags need to write about something, they're just doing what they do; selling ads and taking money from gun manufacturers...
During the Obama years there were stories of Fed agencies buying literally tons of .40, now the narrative has switched to 9mm, anybody else curious why we haven't seen mass dumping of .40 on surplus market?
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The Obama years? That ammo has long been shot up.
There are currently over 13,000 Special Agents in the FBI. The Bureau budgets for 1,000 rounds per agent per year. Agents qualify 4 times a year with their duty handguns. A practice course, a qual course, then a couple of other courses depending on what the training emphasis is for that quarter.
So, that's 14 million rounds right there, every year. Then there's the Academy, where trainees shoot about 10,000 rounds each before graduation. And HRT and SWAT, who have their own quals. A million here, a million there - pretty soon you're talking about a lot of ammo.
Other fed agencies may shoot less, some may shoot more. There are a lot of LE agencies, and a surprising number of gun-toters in non-LE agencies.
No matter what, ammo doesn't get dumped on the market. It gets shot up eventually. Even though the Bu has made the 9mm the standard issue, .40 S&W is still approved for personally-owned Bureau-approved guns. The FBI will be buying .40 ammo for a while.
I know a guy who was helping to close up an old Resident Agency and found a 50 year old case of .38 Super.
Thats where a certain YouTube channel got his info from. He damn near copied the whole thing!I came across this article from Field & Stream about "6 Dead, Dying, and Soon-To-Be-Obsolete Handgun Cartridges." Now, I agree with four of the six. I don't know enough about one to truly form an opinion but I was a little surprised to see it on the list, .41magnum. And the last, completely caught me off guard, the 40S&W.
I, like others, enjoy 40 caliber pistols. They were very popular at one time and there's a lot of people out there that own them or looking to own one. But it seems like now a days everybody wants a 9mm.
Does anyone else out there see the 40s&w round becoming obsolete?
6 Handgun Cartridges That Will Soon Be Obsolete | Field & Stream
Joe