We get a lot of questions about what 9mm ammunition we recommend for self defense. The short answer is 124gr. +P JHP from Federal, Remington, or Winchester.
These rounds tend to function reliably and meet the FBI standards for penetration in ballistic gelatin. These rounds are what most modern 9mm handguns are designed to shoot and thus tend to be the most reliable. Regardless of what the marketing department of an ammunition manufacturer will tell you, there just isn’t that much difference between products in real world terminal ballistic performance, so the real issue is what functions the most reliably in your particular gun.
Some of the current debate about the effectiveness of the M4 is swirling around the “stopping power” of the cartridge and the reliability of the weapon system. Digging through my archives, I found some comments from John Holschen regarding the effectiveness of the cartridge:
The stopping power “problem” is based on the misconception that there exists a hand-held firearm which can instantly terminate hostile behavior (reliably and repeatedly).
How quickly can we expect a bullet to terminate hostile activity; 1-3 seconds, 3-5 seconds, 5-10 seconds? How fast is fast enough?
A couple of years ago I reviewed an LE shooting where a BG was hit 12 times with an AR at a range of 9-12 yds.
- 10 rounds struck his torso producing fatal damage to his liver, spleen, heart and both lungs.
- 1 round struck his right femur fracturing same (and starting his fall toward the ground.)
- 1 round entered through his left eye and destroyed a significant portion of his brain (this was the last shot according to forensics but they noted the BG was already falling at the time this round hit him.)
- The shooting was captured on both video and (separate) audio recordings. The elapsed time from the LEO’s first shot to his 15th shot (total rounds fired) was just under 5 seconds.
- During those 5 seconds the BG continued to fight, firing 6 rounds from a .357 revolver.
Having viewed the autopsy photos of the BG’s heart, lungs, liver and spleen I can tell you that the contents of his torso were pretty much trashed. I just don’t believe that some other caliber would have made a significant difference in the amount of damage. Trashed is trashed.
- The stopping power “problem” is based on the misconception that there exists a hand-held firearm which can instantly terminate hostile behavior (reliably and repeatedly).
- Animals, human and otherwise, can suffer massive fatal wounding and keep performing meaningful activities for some period of time before expiring.
- Multiple torso hits and/or more potent cartridges make it more likely that fatal damage is inflicted but do not reliably reduce the time until incapacitation.
- Hits to the CNS are more likely to achieve a quicker incapacitation but are difficult to accomplish in many situations.
Believing that the 5.56 “stopping power problem” is solved by a different bullet and/or cartridge is likely delusional in my opinion.
As an aside, I have spoken with old-timers soldiers who expressed a poor perception of the 7.62 NATO cartridge as a “man-stopper” when our military transitioned from the M1 Garand (.30-06 cal.) to the M14 (7.62mm). I expect if you go back far enough you will find soldiers who felt the same when they had to give up their .45-70 Trap door Springfields.
I am seeing a lot of discussion and comments about handgun calibers (I don’t think you can talk about guns on the internet without debating caliber) at Marko’s and SayUncle.
As I previously quoted John Holschen:
No common defensive handgun cartridge will quickly and reliably stop a human being who is committed to causing serious bodily harm, unless the bullet from that cartridge is applied to the correct anatomy.
Handgun bullets move too slowly to do anything other than create wound channels the diameter of the (expanded) projectile. Adding another hundred feet per second of velocity or another 3mm of diameter doesn’t really make enough difference to matter. Until you get your handgun rounds moving at more than 2500-3000 fps they aren’t going to do anything different than destroy the tissue that they touch.
Consider that bullet travels through many different types of medium in a human body: bones, fluids, air space, elastic and inelastic tissues. The order in which the bullet encounters these different mediums is going to have a lot of influence on what the bullet does. While we can create some impressive looking numbers by doing some math with the velocity, diameter, and mass of the projectile we have completely ignored the variables of what it is we are shooting at. People are not made of uniform ballistic gelatin, and are highly resistant to damage in the short term.