I recently read a comment by Bill Wilson regarding his preference for 185g bullets in compact 45s. Having a column of cartridges that weigh less makes it easier for the magazine spring to lift them. That got me thinking about the effect of bullet weight apart from ballistics.
When you have a fully loaded handgun, that gun is at its maximum weight… and the recoil of your first shot will be based on that weight. But on each subsequent shot the gun weighs slightly less… the bullet and powder from one cartridge have left the building. So as we fire shot after shot, the recoil increases for each shot. The final shot will have the highest recoil of the series.
We know that manufacturers regulate the sights of a handgun for a specific bullet weight. POA is set above where the bore is actually pointing, under the assumption that the shooter’s reaction to recoil will cause him to raise the bore slightly by the time the bullet leaves the barrel. Having the POA pointing above the bore at rest means that recoil raising the gun will move POI to coincide with POA.
With adjustable sights you can, of course, adjust POA relative to POI.
So since the recoil will increase with each shot as the gun gets lighter, and more recoil moves POI higher relative to POA, should you adjust your sights:
1) with the gun fully loaded, since in an encounter you will always fire that first shot, but may or may not fire the rest.
Or:
2) with the gun half loaded, so that POA/POI are the closest on average over the entire range of recoils.
What say ye?
When you have a fully loaded handgun, that gun is at its maximum weight… and the recoil of your first shot will be based on that weight. But on each subsequent shot the gun weighs slightly less… the bullet and powder from one cartridge have left the building. So as we fire shot after shot, the recoil increases for each shot. The final shot will have the highest recoil of the series.
We know that manufacturers regulate the sights of a handgun for a specific bullet weight. POA is set above where the bore is actually pointing, under the assumption that the shooter’s reaction to recoil will cause him to raise the bore slightly by the time the bullet leaves the barrel. Having the POA pointing above the bore at rest means that recoil raising the gun will move POI to coincide with POA.
With adjustable sights you can, of course, adjust POA relative to POI.
So since the recoil will increase with each shot as the gun gets lighter, and more recoil moves POI higher relative to POA, should you adjust your sights:
1) with the gun fully loaded, since in an encounter you will always fire that first shot, but may or may not fire the rest.
Or:
2) with the gun half loaded, so that POA/POI are the closest on average over the entire range of recoils.
What say ye?