gushulak said:
If you handloaders are worried about the QC of factory rounds, thats why we practice tap, rack, bang's at the range. Any round can be a dud, training is going to trump that.
I would suspect you think the likelihood of a dude factory round is about the same as I think the likelihood is of handloads causing somebody to be dragged through court.
That said, if you think that training and "tap, rack, bang" is ALWAYS going to trump the time lost due to a misfire, you're wrong. If the guy with the shotgun ten feet in front of you is only a second behind you on the trigger, you're going to maybe get as far as "tap"... If you're doing the real cool maneouver Ayoob was demonstrating to Gresham last weekend, with your weak hand deflecting their weapon down at contact range while you draw and put one in their head, the "bang" part will be their weapon stitching you from the bottom up as they recover and you're trying to figure how to get that weak hand back up to start your "tap" drill.
Now obviously, these "what if" scenarios are not likely. But I do disagree with your contention that factory ammunition is "reliable and loaded to better specs than
any handloads can ever be".
Reliable, yes. More reliable than properly handloaded ammunition assembled with great attention to detail? No.
Nobody at Federal, Hornady, etc will guarantee you that you will NEVER get a case without a flash hole, a primer without an anvil, ammunition from a lot that is later recalled for some manufacturing defect or not. But I can, because I personally inspect every case, every flash hole, every primer, every bullet, etc. Furthermore, those companies do not test and evaluate their ammunition for my personal weapon, they develop it for best function over the wide range of weapons out there. Mine is developed and tested for mine and mine alone.
I am not saying I don't trust factory ammunition; because in fact I do, and I would no more worry about the chance of a factory defect costing me my life than I would worry about ending up in court over the issue of using reloads. But I certainly do disagree with the contention that handloads cannot be of as high a quality - and higher - than factory loads when those handloads are intelligently and properly assembled.
The factory generally has tighter QC standards, ballistically the results will be the same.
"Generally" is not the same as claiming always, which was your contention originally. I can accept "generally". And you're correct, when the bullet is moving at a given velocity, it does not have some extra magical powers if it came out of a factory load instead of a reload.
As far as the legality of it, its going to be just one less thing for the prosecution to hang their hat on.
Once again, instead of continuing these dire warnings about the prosecution stringing you up for using handloads, how about some examples beyond the same two that are always cited in magazine articles, decade after decade? A little factual support beyond warnings and two well-worn incidents would be nice.
Are we going to deal in "any possible problems"? If so, Ayoob recommends against owning - much less carrying - any handguns with "provocative names". Are you also going to recommend that "as far as the legality of it goes", that nobody who may use a firearm in self defense should ever own a handgun with a name like "combat magnum", Python, "Wilson Close Quarters Combat"? For he states that too has been made an issue of in court (although, like handloads, he never states what the incidence is of it becoming an issue). If you don't see a problem as well with owning a handgun with a "provocative name" when he advises against it, I'm a little puzzled why you would be so concerned with handloads.
Most "experts" recommend using a good factory JHP, firing a minimum of 200 rounds through your firearm to ensure function
Police forces are usually over the 1000 round mark in their functionality testing - you figure maybe they're overdoing it and just wasting taxpayer's money, or maybe the "experts" are a bit lax in their recommendations?
In any case, how many people do you know that feel handloads are too risky, but have also purchased and run a thousand or so CorBon rounds through their handgun to ensure there's no reliability risk there? At around a dollar a round? Would be kind of crazy to be concerned about the legal risk of handloads, yet not be concerned about the lethal risk of malfunctions, don't you think?
I guess its to each their own, if your 100% comfortable with using reloads in that situation, fine.
It is to each their own - in everything from whether or not to carry a firearm at all, onwards. I just take exception about Chicken Little warnings about how the sky will fall if you use handloads, when there is absolutely nothing beyond a few repeatedly mentioned instances to back up that fear.
You just don't see a lot of law enforcement, CCW trainers or firearms professionals in my opinion suggesting it.
When they have no knowledge of whether you are a competent handloader or an idiot who shouldn't have access to anything resembling reloading equipment, why would they? They aren't really worried about YOUR liability - they're worried about THEIR liability if you do something stupid and then say "Well, Fred said...".
BTW, here's three lawmen/gunfighters who eventually became gun writers after surviving their enforcement careers who wrote of carrying handloads in their handguns and at times suggested self defense handloads to their readers: Bill Jordan, Skeeter Skelton, and Charles Askins.
All were in law enforcement, all became trainers of other law enforcement at various times in their careers, all at one time or another made their living as firearms professionals, two at least were National Pistol Champions. Name me one of the CCW trainers and "firearms professionals" that you have in mind of that was in anywhere near the number of actual gunfights any one of those three was in.
There's gunwriters... and there's gunfighters. The first writes to survive, the second survives to write.
Not only for when a firearm has to be used in a self defense situation to the legal aftermath that follows.
Once again, point us at the "many" instances where handguns have become a factor in the "legal aftermath". You keep saying this, but you also keep going to extraordinary lengths to avoid having to provide examples of this from the "many" instances where you claim this has happened. Why not just list a bunch of them to prove your point and establish your allegation once and for all?
My contention is that you are at a far greater risk of being disarmed and having your handgun used against you - small though that risk may be. But that, I suspect, doesn't cause you to decide CCW isn't for you. And you're also, apparently, at legal risk if you own a firearm with a provocative name - but I'll also bet that doesn't cause you to ensure you own nothing but firearms with names like "Ladysmith"...
I do understand the points the handload guys are making, but to me its just not worth the risk, its as simple as that.
That's fine. The fact that the "greater risk" you keep alluding to (but still can't provide examples of) is in fact statistically non-existant really doesn't matter. What's important is you feel secure in your choice.
I will pay more attention to this "legal risk" crap - whether the fear is of handloads or owning firearms with "provocative sounding" names - when somebody can do better than dredge up only one or two examples over the last 20 - 30 years. That kind of warning is a Wendy Cukier type argument: dire warnings, no evidence.
And I'll also bet most if not all of those running around warning about the legal dangers of using handloads are for some reason or other not issueing equal warnings about the name of the handguns you own, attending nasty sounding schools like "Lethal Force Institute", etc. Only some legal risks, apparently, need mention or worry about!