Hello!
While out at Camp Atterbury working the National Matches, I was talking guns with a co-worker, and we were discussing the 40.
Having no personal experience with the round, I tend to ask questions and listen to the answers. My co-worker is a retired LEO and police firearms instructor. He shared that he personally disliked the round, and shared numerous examples of officers having difficulty qualifying with the round due to flinching and limp-wristing induced by the muzzle flip generated by the "snappy" round.
Is there any particular round or weight bullet in factory loaded rounds that can minimize this "snappiness"? Can this" snappiness" be minimized or eliminated via the use of handloads?
Should I purchase a handgun in 40 S&W, it would primarily be for range shooting, and once mastered, for CCW where I am legal to carry. The handgun I am looking at would be either a Sig 226 or 229.
Thanks in advance for your advice.
While out at Camp Atterbury working the National Matches, I was talking guns with a co-worker, and we were discussing the 40.
Having no personal experience with the round, I tend to ask questions and listen to the answers. My co-worker is a retired LEO and police firearms instructor. He shared that he personally disliked the round, and shared numerous examples of officers having difficulty qualifying with the round due to flinching and limp-wristing induced by the muzzle flip generated by the "snappy" round.
Is there any particular round or weight bullet in factory loaded rounds that can minimize this "snappiness"? Can this" snappiness" be minimized or eliminated via the use of handloads?
Should I purchase a handgun in 40 S&W, it would primarily be for range shooting, and once mastered, for CCW where I am legal to carry. The handgun I am looking at would be either a Sig 226 or 229.
Thanks in advance for your advice.