People get too wrapped up in caliber, when shot placement is the key.
People get too wrapped up in shot placement. Civilian self defense shootings tend to be at very short range, where the use of the sights is impossible.
People get too wrapped up in caliber, when shot placement is the key.
Erich is 100% correct the .380 ACP and .32 ACP pistols are best served by shooting full metal jacket or "ball" ammunition.
Just want to let you know that the "old" FBI Load is NOT the same as todays anemic one. The current Remington,Federal and Winchester versions are reduced 10 - 12 % and are about 100 - 120 fps slower than they were. I might suggest either using well stored older ammo or use the Buffalo Bore version which is excellent and better than the Big 3 ever were. This is not just my opinion, but my Chronograph tested results. Just want you to be aware.
People get too wrapped up in shot placement. Civilian self defense shootings tend to be at very short range, where the use of the sights is impossible.
Erich
Can you comment on 22 rim fire homichides?
What kinda qualifier is that? A full metal jacket 380 will penetrate mote than a 357? So will a 9 mm or a 50 blog. But I bet a Fmj 357 will out penetrate a 380 funk. Apple's to bananasI have read with interest the above 35 posts. The people who believe a 380ACP has not enough penetration need to YouTube some videos. With fmj ammo it often out penetrates the 357Mag with hollow point ammunition. A common theme "I have carried_______________ caliber with ___________ ammo for __________ number of years with no complaints" does not tell us much because it was never used. I have hunted big game for decades and was an elk guide for a number of years. I have over 100 projectiles recovered from downed game. I have documented every bullet at to distance shot, caliber, bullet weight and manufacture, and wound track. My great mistake was I never documented my handgun trials. Often when taking an animal, I would immediately prop him up and shoot his carcass with whatever handgun I was carrying to test bullet expansion. I probably did this 30 to 40 times. I recovered many bullets but did not document results as it was not the handgun that took the game. Dumb dumb. A few times I did and in archives you will find recovered bullets taken from an antelope I shot with a 380 ACP. I do remember the 2 mule deer I tested a snub nosed 38 Special using 110 grain hp ammo failed to exit on a broadside lung shot. I used a Ruger LCP with Buffalo Bore 95 grn fmj ammo to shoot through both sides and exit a mid sized mule deer's lung cavity. It was late winter and he had a heavy winter coat. An interesting note about the above story, that deer had stopped a Winchester 180 grain bullet from a 30-06 just minutes before.
I certainly hope you don't limit your training to point shooting only. Having read about some recent shootouts, it was obvious that the person involved was most successful when he started looking at the sights. Point shooting has its place, but isn't where someone should stop.Agree. that's why I point-shoot my carry revolvers.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wXwPtP-KDNk&feature=youtube_gdata_player
Warning: gruesome content.
My take:
Handguns are sharp sticks.
The vitals are small targets so stabbing has to be done accurately.
The stick must be reliable.
I have read in a couple places that a 380 from a 3.5 inch barrel is wound balisticly more effective then a 38 spcl from a 2 inch barrel.
I have a couple 380s that I enjoy shooting but I find it difficult to believe that a round (any standard pressure round) from the 380 is going to be more effective then a round (any standard pressure round) from my model 60 38.
What kinda qualifier is that? A full metal jacket 380 will penetrate mote than a 357? So will a 9 mm or a 50 blog. But I bet a Fmj 357 will out penetrate a 380 funk. Apple's to bananas
"Shot placement is king, adequate penetration is queen; everything else is just angels dancing on the heads of pins."
It's an old idea. The Devel bullet was patented in 1992.Check out this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-PDQcE-1T40
I own one but I like the response. Larry
You cannot deny the comparison with traditional hollow points and fmj ammo. Of course, the proof is in actual use, of which there is no data that has been considered reliable. Showing the penetration even after first negotiating various barriers is also relevant.It's an old idea. The Devel bullet was patented in 1992.
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When bullets penetrate tissue or gelatin they create both a permanent crush cavity and a temporary cavity. Ballistic gelatin is damaged by the formation and collapse of the temporary cavity, but at pistol velocities temporary cavity is not a significant wounding factor. MAC is misinterpreting the results by measuring the temporary cavity effects rather than the permanent cavity.
Yeah, but if you can't count on it...which you can't...
Mas Ayoob gives great advice, regarding testing with ballistic gelatin:
"Whether the formula for ballistic gelatin was 20% or 10%, there was always the issue that ballistic gel is a homogeneous substance and the human body is a heterogeneous substance in which the human-like swine muscle tissue Dr. Martin Fackler's gelatin protocol was developed to duplicate did not give the same resistance as skin, bone, cartitlege, solid abdominal viscera, etc.
The early 147 grain subsonic Winchester OSM worked great in gelatin, but had "good news and bad news" performance in actual shootings around the country, which led to the development of both the .40 S&W cartridge and today's much more effective high-tech 147 grain 9mm bullets.
The reason the "stopping power debate" seems to be eternal is that it's simply a multi-dimensional issue with so many variables that I for one don't think it can ever be truly quantified in a "test setting." What was the toxicology screen on the man who took the bullets? How much of an adrenaline high was he on? (I have yet to meet a forensic pathologist or toxicologist who can show me a way to measure internally-generated epinephrine, post-mortem.) And, like alcohol, epinephrine affects different people in different ways, which cannot be conclusively analyzed from autopsy. Much of "stopping power speed" is determined by what is going on in the mind and the body of the attacker, neither of which can be conclusively quantified after the shooting is over. There is no study that quantifies exactly which organs were hit by which bullets at what point in the gunfight, let alone differentiating whether the "heart shot" clipped the edge of the pericardium or entered at the right atrium as opposed to the left ventricle (yes, there seems to be a difference).
For decades now, I've recommended selecting loads that work well both in gelatin AND in street performance quantified after numerous actual, investigated shootings. THEN, work on what REALLY seems to win gunfights: tactics, ability to swiftly (and if necessary, continuously) hit the parts of the body you need to shut down while firing under adverse circumstances, and an understanding of deadly force law that will allow you to deliver those hits without hesitation and not fire until you are sure of that."
For me, I pay particular attention to the penetration. The 12-18" FBI requirements obviously exceed some human body dimensions.
Permanent wound channels are interesting but may not be a true representation of what we should expect.
Now, I plan to do some more testing (thanks for the question!) of .38 spl and .380 rounds![]()
Here is a good writeup by Dr.Gary K. Roberts who studies gunshot wounds for military and LE and is considered an expert in the field of modern wound ballistics.
BUG's: .380 ACP vs. .38 Sp - M4Carbine.net Forums
His qualifications can be found here: http://www.dtic.mil/ndia/2008Intl/Roberts.pdf
I'm not sure why you quoted me: that post of mine that you quoted was answering the post immediately above it by jag312, about the possibility of "psychological stops," and has nothing whatsoever to do with the substance of your post. I'm also not sure where your quote of Mas ends, as you have no end quote there.
I like and respect Mas plenty and I like Fackler enough that we had him do some work for us. If you'll look through my posts on .380s here and elsewhere, I'm consistently a proponent of penetration. So, was your quotation of me intentional? Were you trying to refute or agree with me? I'm sorry, but I'm confused.
Good posts.
[*]In three shootings, .380 JHP rounds that were properly aimed to hit the aformentioned vitals failed to penetrate adequately to do so.
I'm not sure what you mean by that. It acts like a flat point ball round with some extra temporary cavity.You cannot deny the comparison with traditional hollow points and fmj ammo.
"failed to penetrate adequately" = noDid these rounds stop the aggressive act?