Ruger just came out with a poly revolver....
just,.... as in 4 years ago
and its a stainless steel barrel and cylinder. and steel internals
Ruger just came out with a poly revolver....
You're comparing a Norinco to rifles which from certain brands can run into the 2 grand range. No #### it's higher quality.
Compare a Norinco to a Bushmaster or DPMS AR. Fit and finish aside I bet you have similar quality.
The Norinco CanAm special are at par if not better then the comparable Springfield Armory version 1911, yea the one "made in uhmurica". It costs half the price.
Norinco SKS's are some of the highest quality SKS's out there, the Chinese give you a gun for the price some companies charge for a magazine.
It's no different then the huge craze a few years ago about having "mill spec" parts.
...he has a history of starting moronic threads that troll.
The Norinco CanAm special are at par if not better then the comparable Springfield Armory version 1911, yea the one "made in uhmurica". It costs half the price.
I didnt read this whole thread. I don't understand why people have to get so personal about a simply question.
As I read it, the OP is asking that, if you took 2 rounds... both exactly the same calibre, load, bullet etc and they BOTH went bang at the wrong time, which gun would suffer the least amount of damage. I think scientifically you'd have to accept the all metal gun is LESS likely to explode into tiny bits than the polymer gun. Even the pictures posted thus far have shown that many of the metal guns (most are 1911's) tend to crack or blow out a small piece of metal (still dangerous, not arguing that at all) whereas the polymer guns seem to really blow the frame apart.
Now, many of you are on rampages about "durability". That was not at all what the OP was asking. I don't know or care whats more durable, a 1911 or a Glock. Doesnt matter to me and I wont argue it either way. But, in terms of failure damage resistance, what would you rather be holding when it goes boom... a Glock 21 or a 1911? I know id take the 1911 for sure. Not because its a better gun, longer lasting, ###ier, more accurate, more "durable" or whatever many of you get all up tight about. My reasoning, in this instance alone, would be simply due to the fact that my hand is wrapped around steel... not plastic. When the explosion exits out the bottom of the grip all thats likely to come apart are the grip panels. But, in the case of a polymer gun, the entire frame could come apart...
I think that addresses what the OP is asking... maybe I'm wrong, at least I TRIED to answer his actual question.
So is steel technically stronger then polymer when used in modern autoloaders?
As someone with a degree in materials sciences this thread hurts to read.
I don't know if I read it wrong, but it seems to me that the question was not especially vague. It was actually quite concise:
The answer is not just yes, it's hell yes. By about a factor of 10. And it doesn't matter if you are using it in a pistol or an axe handle or a child's toy, steel is always stronger than any plastic.
To everyone who made statements about human bones and polymers and whatever else being stronger than steel, give your heads a shake. Steel is the strongest metallic solid, and only ceramics are stronger. And possibly spider webs.
It might help some of you to understand that the definition of "strength" is the capacity to bear load per area of cross-section. Weight or mass of the solid is not a factor in determining strength.