The ladies I've been around that were sensitive to recoil also found that the heavier guns needed to absorb that recoil were too heavy to hold out at arms length easily. So you will likely fix one problem but end up with another instead.
One option I've seen is that where they found a 9mm to be too snappy and didn't like dodging the hot brass they all quite enjoyed .38Spl from a revolver. And a S&W K frame gun is quite slim and light which worked for holding it out at arms length as well.
Hmmm.... I think Can-Down might be onto something here![]()
My lightest recoiling 9mm is a 1911, but is heavy.
Can you make mild handholds? That is what I give my wife and daughter to shoot in light 9mms..
And I agree a 38 Revolver (excellent trigger) with wadcutters might be the most satisfying for the lady.
Just to throw it out there, what about .380 ACP? You can get them as cheap as $17 for 50. You can get 1911s chambered for this.
If you could buy a .380 pistol that weighed around 43 oz. you might be on to something but most .380 autos I have shot are far more snappy to shoot then the 9MM. Using 147 gr bullets and light loads the 9MM is very soft shooting. Load them in a small gun and the caliber can be snappy. Just physics.Just to throw it out there, what about .380 ACP? You can get them as cheap as $17 for 50. You can get 1911s chambered for this.
What's a good semi automatic hand gun in 38
No, they don't. I've owned multiple models of all three and while the polymer handguns can exhibit less muzzle rise due to a lower bore axis they have a "snappy" recoil that can be off-putting to a shooter that's recoil sensitive. There's no way a pistol that weighs half-pound lighter can recoil less.M&p or glock. Both shoot softer than a cz.



























