350 Mag said:
Rick, through his lack of response, has waved the white flag and decided he better not post anymore...you should do the same....afterall...you are no longer arguing with a novice...
We are attempting to have a rational discussion with someone who is acting like an idiot.
I didn't stop responding to you as a sign of "waving the white flag". I stopped because you can't make an honest comparision to begin with - which is why you try stunts like comparing double stack 10mm's against single stack .45's when going on about all the extra ammunition a 10mm will carry (as though that will matter with Canada's laws and the few seconds a bear will give you).
I stopped because there is little more to be said to anyone else reading this thread - you don't matter, because narrow minds let in very little light.
I stopped because I know CO's in this province who worked predator control using dogs to tree dozens of bears and had no trouble killing those bears with their issue 40 S&W. I've shot two bears with a .38 Spl which pretty much dropped where they were shot, and they were pretty excited at the time. I've shot a fair number of wild boars with the "anemic" 9mm, along with about the same number of deer and stags - and watched other guys do the same. They all died pretty quickly, despite the "inadequate" cartridge and "inadequate" ball ammunition. Meanwhile, I'm supposed to discuss this endlessly with somebody who has absolutely NO experience whatsoever. Someone who has been shooting handguns for one whole year, has never killed ANY animal with a handgun, and in fact doesn't even carry a handgun - he kills paper targets at the range and that's the full extent of his handgun use.
I stopped because I had field work to do, not endlessly spend my time here amusing you. Field work where I DO carry a handgun on an ATC, incidentally. That's how I make the money that pays the bills.
And perhaps most of all, I stopped because you made your intent very clear a long time ago:
lets keep exploring this until......I win with the last word...
Given that you have vowed to have the last word, I'd be crazy to waste time out of my life seeing if I could outlast a logic-challenged zealot determined to have the last post. You may have nothing better to do with your life, but I do.
You are arguing against "real life" experiences of JJ HACK...a man that has witnessed/and/or killed more North American Black Bears(with a handgun) than any other hunter in the history of hunting BLACK BEAR in NORTH AMERICA???
Let's see... I have personally shot bears with the "inadequate" 38 Spl and watched them pretty much drop at the shots, and a .38 sure isn't a .45. I see another poster here hasn't had any problems killing black bears with a .45 ACP - including charging bears. CO's in this province have killed dozens of bears with 40 S&W's, and none of them have been eaten yet, or started a hue and cry for a bigger handgun.
Now you apparently know Hack, but I don't. So I had a read of the reams of material you've posted from your 10mm library relating to Hack. A few things jump off the page at me:
The impact was solid, smoke could easily be seen coming out of the hole in the bear’s chest.
Wow!
I mean, WOW! WOW! Man, we're learnin' now!
At first I thought a good part of the problem might be the fact this hunter was using a bullet a little too heavy to get good performance out of this caliber. BUT JJ HACK PERSONALLY SAW IT START SOME SORT OF FIRE IN THE BEAR THAT SMOKE COULD BE SEE COMING FROM THE HOLE FROM 20 YARDS DISTANT. MAN, THE GUY MUST HAVE BEEN USING TRACERS! Yes, he personally observed this while also observing the ineffectiveness of the round. All of this is true - not a word of exaggeration!
I have a question, gentle readers: how many of you have shot animals from 20-30 yards and observed SMOKE curling from the wound after the shot like ol' JJ Hack saw?
Now, if an "inadequate" .45 ACP can generate enough internal heat in the wound from 20 yards away to generate SMOKE... why doesn't my 358 Norma Magnum throwing a 250 grain bullet at just over 2900 fps have them downright bursting into flame?
I've never seen "smoke" coming from a wound from a handgun, even when destroying animals hit by vehicles from ten feet away or so. So, perhaps readers can understand that my bulls**t detector is furiously vibrating?
With the explosive 130-grain bullet from the .270 the deer will launch into the air with a nerve reaction and fall within a few steps.
Bulls**t detector is vibrating furiously again.
I've shot a couple of deer with a .270 and 130 grain bullets (I was an acolyte of Jack O'Connor as a young lad) and watched them run like hell for a couple of hundred yards before going down. O'Connor himself wrote about this same reaction himself, many, many times over the years. I suspect a few readers here have seen the same thing. Yet when JJ Hack shoots them with HIS .270 and HIS 130 grain bullets, they all leap in the air and fall within a few steps.
O-kaaaayyyyy.... the man has a magic rifle...
I think soft point bullets with maximum loads would give you a false sense of security for bear backup as well. I don’t see the hard cast bullets in 357 mag being enough better to trust 100 percent of the time. They are not what I would carry and I would never suggest anyone hunt even the smaller black bears or deer with one.... I also have to laugh when I hear guys talking about “back up” guns for hikes in bear country, or while fishing in Alaska.
JJ Hack, meet Phil Shoemaker from Alaska. A man who has lived among both black and big-assed grizzlies bigger than anything you ever treed, and carried a... pathetic .357 Magnum to good effect. JJ, go talk with Phil and then laugh your ass off.
A human being is a very soft and mentally weak animal. A Human shot in the leg will go down for the count screaming for help.
I don't need a bulls**t detector for this one. Ol' JJ shouldn't have even tried passing this one off - too many anecdotes from the police, military, etc to give this much more than the horse laugh.
Well, that's enough of that. I think ol' JJ Hack's observations are... interesting. I do gotta get me some of them there rounds that leave smoke pouring out of the bullet holes though! I wonder if JJ will tell me where to git me some.
I'll go with my personal experience and that of the CO's I know instead, thanks. The stories aren't nearly as dramatic - no smoke billowing out of bullet wounds and stuff like that - but the bears all seem to go flop when shot just fine. Hack's probably sell better, however...
But let's cut to the chase here: in a couple of instances now you've said I claimed the .45 ACP was superior to the 10mm. That's rubbish. Let's get back to what this is all about. You proclaimed:
Normal .45 ACP is NOT an adequate round to dispatch a Black Bear. It may or may not do the job but lacks penetration needed to be considered an adequate bear gun.
The 180 gr Gold Dot actually out EXPANDS the much larger 45 and still out-penetrates...numbers don't lie. which can run circles around the .45 ACP in any department...Faster, Flatter shooting, more accurate, more energy, more capacity, better penetration etc etc etc...
To which I responded:
The 10mm probably is the much better choice for someone with an ATC. On the other hand, as rgv has pointed out, the CO's seem to kill bears quite dead with 40 S&W's when they have to, and the .45 with modern loads has more thump than the 40.
Bottom line? I think those declaring the .45 ACP belongs in a museum or expecting it to be shoved aside by the 10mm will be long dead, buried, and forgotten themselves before either of those two wishful thoughts ever come to pass.
...
Which leads me to a real crazy thought: maybe it's better off to be able to shoot fast and accurately with whatever you happen to be carrying, than to have THE ULTIMATE BEAR GUN and presume its' mere presence is some sort of talisman that drives off bears.
So here we are. The fact of the matter is there isn't a 10mm out there that is beating the .45 ACP's in bullseye and PPC competition. Not relevant to self defense, but pretty much illustrates the BS behind the claim the 10mm is more accurate. If it were, competitors would be going to it in droves.
The 180 grain Gold Dot does NOT out-expand and out-penetrate the .45 ACP. It out expands the .45 Gold Dot by a whole .01" of an inch, while penetrating the same distance (using the measurebation figures you supplied, not mine). The .45, given it's larger diameter to begin with, leaves a much larger wound channel, which Fackler says is the real key to evaluating stopping power. But you don't want to go there.
And having lauded the 180 grain Gold Dot in the 10mm as you have for its' expansion and penetration, let's just compare the two to see how far the poor .45 Auto lags behind.
They have exactly the same penetration depth.
The 10mm expands a whopping .01" greater than the .45.
The 10mm has 675 ft/lbs of energy versus 520 ft/lbs for the .45
They both have 33 lbs-feet of momentum
The 10mm has a Taylor KOV of 13 while the .45 has a KOV of 14
The 10mm has a smaller permanent wound cavity than the .45
Never mind which is "better". Remember this bit:
Normal .45 ACP is NOT an adequate round to dispatch a Black Bear. It may or may not do the job but lacks penetration needed to be considered an adequate bear gun.
The 180 gr Gold Dot actually out EXPANDS the much larger 45 and still out-penetrates...numbers don't lie. which can run circles around the .45 ACP in any department.
So.. the fabulous 10mm 180 grain Gold Dot that out expands and out penetrates is okay with 15.25" of penetration and .96" of expansion, but the .45 ACP 230 grain Gold Dot that also penetrates 15.25" but expands to .01" less is inadequate and "lacks penetration needed to be considered an adequate bear gun".
Right...
Gentle reader, look at those various comparative measurements and ask yourself if the .45 falls so far behind what the 10mm produces with this 10mm round that supposedly out-expands and out-penetrates the .45 (not) that it can be considered ".45 ACP belongs in a museum, old cartridge, past its prime and quite easily a joke when compared to 10mm Auto" as our friend 350 Mag has claimed in his posts.
Personally, I don't see enough difference between the .45 and 10mm Gold Dot of our friend loves so for its' penetration and expansion to matter in the real world - except to those whose experience mostly consists of measurebating, memorizing ballistics tables, and killing paper at the range. There are people who actually carry handguns in their profession for self defense - and people who kill paper on the range when they aren't memorizing ballistics tables.
In fact, let's look one last time at 350Mag's Double Tap data - ammunition that he doesn't have, has never fired a round of, and which wouldn't kill paper on the approved gun range he is restricted to any better than the cheapest practice ammo - but he has all the specs on.
Look at the various 10mm loads that he lists and then data not only for the .45, but the also "inadequate" .357 and .40 S&W
DoubleTap .357 Magnum
158gr. Gold Dot JHP @ 1400fps - 19.0" .56"
DoubleTap .40 S&W Penetration / expansion
200gr XTP @ 1050fps - 17.75" / .59"
DoubleTap .45ACP
230gr Gold Dot JHP @ 1010fps - 15.25" / .95"
DoubleTap 10mm
135gr JHP @ 1600fps - 11.0" / .70" frag nasty
155gr Gold Dot JHP @ 1475fps - 13.5" / .88"
165gr Gold Dot JHP @ 1400fps - 14.25" / 1.02"
165gr Golden Saber JHP @ 1425fps - 14.75" / .82"
180gr Golden Saber JHP @ 1330fps - 16.0" / .85"
180gr XTP @ 1350fps – 17.25” / .77”
180gr Gold Dot JHP @ 1300fps - 15.25" / .96"
200gr XTP @ 1250fps - 19.5" / .72"
It looks like 350 Mag will have to tell any 10mm owner using the 135 gr. Nosler JHP, 155 gr Gold Dot, 165 gr Gold Dot, 165 gr. Golden Saber, and possibly the 180 gr. XTP and 180 gr. Gold Dot that they are using loads that are "a joke". If they aren't shooting the 200 gr. XTP round - the crazy fools - they're shooting ammunition little better than the .40 "short and weak".
Go ahead - use 350 Mag's ballistics data with this ballistic's calculator:
http://www.handloads.com/calc/quick.asp
See just how head and shoulders all those 10mm rounds stand above not just the .45 ACP, but the pathetic .40 "Short & Weak" and .357 Magnum. Then ask yourself if their performance really is that far behind the 10mm to deservedly be calling them "a joke".
Two parting thoughts. First, while 350 Mag is killing paper on the range and frantically measurebating with his enormous collection of ballistics charts, I and others like me will be carrying a handgun in the real world on a CCW in the US and on an ATC in Canada while working in my profession.
Second, while I still don't own a .45 ACP and probably never will, those who do can buy a relatively inexpensive spring, buffer, and a handful of cases and have a .45 ACP that is far more ahead of 350 Mag's 10mm than his 10mm is ahead of normal .45 ACP loads. Run .45 caliber 200 grain bullets at 1450 fps through that ballistics calculator against any of 350 Mag's beloved Double Tap loads. No barrel chambered for a wildcat required, just a spring and buffer swap, and enough prepped cases to have what you hope you never need.
And worst of all, 350 Mag can stuff powder in his 10mm cases until he blows up his gun, and he'll never get that performance that .45 ACP owners can have. Expansion ratio just isn't on his side.
The 10mm is a very good caliber. There's absolutely nothing wrong with it, and it is a very good choice in an autoloader for an ATC pistol. But to seize on that caliber and proclaim the .45 and its' performance to be antiquated and a "joke" is just the sign of a newby.
am lernin...someday I will be as good/smart as you....
I suppose that is remotely possible.
However, it won't change the fact you still won't be doing anything with that 10mm other than measurebating and using those Double Tap loads (if you ever get them) for nothing more than killing paper targets.
Therein lies the difference...
And now, 350 Mag, you can have the last word you're determined to have...