Random thoughts about guns while waiting for my ride to Salamanca....
calmex,
Come to think of it now, maybe early March in Mexico is better than early March in Canada. But just maybe. I am the one who is dreaming now ... !
Thank you. Trust me that weatherwise, it is.
Mexico has some weird laws and one of them is that hollow-points are prohibited. In Mexico, if something iffy is not prohibited (in the Firearms Law) then it's a misdemeanor. If you, as a foreigner, are caught carrying an unregistered .38 Caliber pistol, you're going to jail. If, on the other hand, it's registered, you'll have to pay a fine and you'll probably even get the gun back. If you shoot an intruder in your home, the authorities will check that the gun is registered and of "legal" caliber and if it is you're good to go and probably won't even need to leave the house. On the other hand, if it's unregistered, you'll have to use the "Constitution claim" that allows you to have up to 3 unregistered guns (of any caliber) in your house and you'll probably still skate free. Don't ever get caught with any of those guns outside the house, though. That, again, would mean jail.
But if you use hollowpoints, things become "iffy". Hollowpoints are the force multipliers of the pistol shooting world. An inadequate caliber using solid shot can suddenly become a quite reliable caliber using the expanding bullets. I have been told by close Mexican friends that using a hollowpoint round in an action actually occuring inside your house will be "okay" under the Constitution (in other words, "you'll walk") but outside your house it would mean jail. I like the MP Molds and especially their 170 grain Keith bullet which comes with the pins to make it a 162 grain Hollowpoint. I think that will solve the "house defense" issue, and I intend to get myself such a mold to run experiments on just as soon as the handgun ban goes away and I can buy myself a 4.25 inch .357 to shoot in Canada. (I realize that there is a chance that the handgun ban won't go away, but I like to try to be positive in my outlook and I think that Spanky is circling the toilet bowl right now and Canada's future might -- just might -- be a little brighter ahead. I sure hope so.) And if I'm wrong, I'll just have to get the molds into Mexico and run the experiments here. There are easy work-arounds to some problems.
As to the auto-pistols, I fancy myself a Commander in .380 Cal for here in Mexico. The Critical Duty ammo looks promising and I think they'd "get around" the hollowpoint ruling with that polymer filling in the tip. I realize one would have to pull the bullets and reload them again but I don't think that's going to affect them. I sell the Critical Duty +P rounds in my work and will buy a box for testing. I can shoot 5 or 6 over the chronograph and group them at the same time. Then I can pull some, reload them normally and re-check those to the same velocity and accuracy out of my Beretta 92FS. I would assume all should work fine. You'd never have enough around to actually practice with, but I have the MP Mold for a 135 grain 9mm bullet (two of them, with 8-cavities each!) and hopefully the POI would be close enough as well. Testing, testing. These would be reloaded in the .380 Cal guns, of course, giving them equivilent power to their 9mm +P originals.
Once I spent a whole day trying to get Michael's 2.5-inch Model 19 up to 1,200 fps using a 162 grain Lee TLSWC and the best I could get was 1,180 fps with a lot of fanfare and recoil and blast. 1,150 was more normal using most powders and 1,125 was the best some would do, albeit with considerable pomp and ceremony all the same. Vicious little beasts. All the same, they are more compact than most weapons of their power that one might have at one's disposal under Mexican Law. (And I adore them visually.)
For around the property, I think loading some of the 162-grain MP-Mold SWC hollow-point bullets -- perhaps powdercoated only on the parts touching the barrel itself -- to be used from the baby magnums would do for the wife and kids. Down here, if you are carrying "off property", a registered pocket-snubby in .38 Special is the best way to go. Without HP ammo. A 160 LSWC at around 900 fps will get the attention of both your target, and you yourself once you touch it off. This is the sort of stuff I think about a lot, how to make something that's probably inadequate into "adequate under Mexican Law". Because where we live -- and where I am right now -- this "self-defense isn't an option for civilian" crap is just crap and anyone living here knows it. Any lawmaker, or attorney pushing that argument in any society is "working for the other side". You simply cannot be in that job -- either or -- and be that naive and if you truly are, that's no excuse. Get out and live a little before you spout such silliness.
Although I think they probably don't put out enough "poop" to be effective to the level I'd like, I adore the .357 snubbies. I do not own one but think that one or several would be nice to have around. I spent a whole afternoon with this one, trying to get it up to 1,200 fps using a 162 grain TLSWC without success. Although I was shellshocked from the concussion under the hot tin roof sun shelter at the range, it's a day I remember with a smile.
Micheal's 2.5-inch Model 19 nickel finish. He installed his own green ramp as he did on my 28. I do, however, think that a medium-soft LSWCHP bullet of 162 grains at around 1,150 fps would suffice as the HP is a "force multiplier", and it would be legal enough for around the property. This now sits hidden on his sailboat in the Mazatlan marina.
The Model 66 is another snubby .357 that I'd grab if I found one. This one is similar to the one Allen Galindo uses as his daily carry while working in his restaurant in San Miguel. It's the "Gauntlet" or "Tightrope" gun for sure!
Truly one of my favorites is friend Harold's Colt Python 2.5-incher that we remarked as a Diamondback -- and then, get this, installed a blued .38 Special-only cylinder from an 8-inch .38 Special ,Target Python when he went to register it. Once the paperwork was done, of course, the original .357 cylinder went back in. But this one, I truly covet. I'd love it if he'd sell it to me. I'd love it even more if he'd hire me for bodyguarding work like he used to and just pay me by giving it to me. Well, I can dream, can't I?
Once, on a particularly disgusting Gringo website that exists only for ex-pats, and American resident in San Miguel published this photo, with the caption: "A Canadian house-defense kit: a 9mm, a box of shells, and a couple of magazines." There were several very positive comments from the usual POS's who can't speak Spanish and think their poop doesn't stink that inhabit the ex-pat community in that town.
I uploaded this photo, with the comment: "Yes, that's cute. But you got the wrong photo. I'm Canadian, I live here, and this is my actual house-defense kit: a 9mm, a box of shells, and a couple of magazines. Note that I would not dare publish this unless I had absolute certainty that the 'authorities' will do nothing about it." That sort of ended that thread. And here's my ride...