IMO,
Having been a Keltecer for almost a decade because of price and size, including early 9mm, .40, .357 Sig, .32 and .380, I cannot recommend them unless you discipline yourself to keep the round count very, very low.
Small backup guns are sometimes referred to as "Face" guns. Good terminology. If you are in a situation where you need to fight with a small backup, your target is an eyeball, not a silhouette at 25 yards.
A .22LR HP will sufficiently scramble a brain when shot through a head port, ending the fight quickly. .25, .32, .380 etc. will all do the same thing.
We had a highway patrolman shot here in Utah about 15 years ago by a perp with a locally manufactured .22LR North American Arms teeny Single Action revolver. One shot just above the body armor pointed down toward the heart did the deed.
Priorities:
1. reliable firing;
2. shot placement;
3. concealability and accessibility;
4. caliber
FWIW, the perp above carried the .22 in an upside-down holster suspended over his chest on a neck chain. It was accessible in a hands on struggle with the trooper. In a pocket? Not so much.
Having been a Keltecer for almost a decade because of price and size, including early 9mm, .40, .357 Sig, .32 and .380, I cannot recommend them unless you discipline yourself to keep the round count very, very low.
Small backup guns are sometimes referred to as "Face" guns. Good terminology. If you are in a situation where you need to fight with a small backup, your target is an eyeball, not a silhouette at 25 yards.
A .22LR HP will sufficiently scramble a brain when shot through a head port, ending the fight quickly. .25, .32, .380 etc. will all do the same thing.
We had a highway patrolman shot here in Utah about 15 years ago by a perp with a locally manufactured .22LR North American Arms teeny Single Action revolver. One shot just above the body armor pointed down toward the heart did the deed.
Priorities:
1. reliable firing;
2. shot placement;
3. concealability and accessibility;
4. caliber
FWIW, the perp above carried the .22 in an upside-down holster suspended over his chest on a neck chain. It was accessible in a hands on struggle with the trooper. In a pocket? Not so much.
