Sorry but I have a very low opinion of the 40. It is a 9 that wants to be a 45 and fails at both.
I have yet to fire it in a gun the didn't buck and jump around worse than any 45 I have shot.
You want to shoot majors, get a 45 and reload.
You want cheap commercial ammo get a 9.
Funny that the .40 nearly lead to the death of the 10mm Auto, now the .40 is fading fast and the 10mm is more popular than ever.
i see lots of 40s&w on the ipsc circuit. most guys shooting major are shooting 40s&w.
Funny that the .40 nearly lead to the death of the 10mm Auto, now the .40 is fading fast and the 10mm is more popular than ever.
I ended up buying a 10mm full size since I couldn't find any of the .40 I was interested in (single stack compact)
Maybe glock should chamber their new 48 in .40
I just picked up a full sized, all steel IWI Jericho in .40. I shoot only home-loads, and it is a very accurate and pleasant pistol to shoot! Got it for a great price new from Tenda.
One of the biggest factors in the move back to 9mm from 40S&W is the advent of 147 gr. 9mm projectiles. When standard 9mm loads were 115 & 124 gr. bullets there was a significant ballistic difference between them and the standard 180 gr. 40 S&W load. With 147 gr. bullets that difference is minimized and for law enforcement the 9mm offers the advantage of higher mag capacities (typically 17 rounds of 9mm vs. 15 rounds of 40S&W). I also agree that 40 in polymer guns is a snappier round to shoot than 9mm and this becomes more of an issue with so many more females in LE these days. Light gun + snappy round + less hand strength = less controllability.