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Recommended 9mm carry ammunition

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.

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Handgun Designs

Often times I hear people say that you should select a gun that “feels the best to you. Go to the range and shoot a bunch of guns and buy the one you like.” This is lousy advice, and often results in new shooters making poor purchases. Again equipment should be selected based on the criteria for YOUR mission (private citizen, concealed carry, LE duty, military, etc) and then evaluated based on your tactics and skills. If you have no tactics and skills then you have no reference point to make an informed decision. If your tactics and skills suck, then your equipment selection will likely suck.

Body shape and size are  factors for weapon selection. The biggest variation is hand size. For smaller handed shooters, single stack magazine feed handguns can be an advantage. Realistically, however, most anyone can learn to shoot any gun well. Don’t get caught up in the subjective feel of the gun.

One of the most important criteria for selecting a firearm for self defense is reliability. The gun needs to go bang every time. For defensive purposes, guns should only be considered if the platform has seen years of use and millions of rounds down range. I have no interest in being a guinea pig. The latest gun design might be cool to own, but it has no business out on the street until someone else has verified it with a very large sample and lots of rounds. This generally restricts our selection to guns that have been issued to large government organizations.

Additionally, firearms that deviate from their original manufacture design should be avoided. The biggest problem area is when manufacturers change the cartridge without redesigning the entire platform. For example, Glock originally designed the small frame size only for 9mm. With American law enforcement moving to .40 S&W as a duty round, Glock introduced the smaller frame size in .40 S&W. The result is a high pressure cartridge being fired out of a gun designed for the lower pressure 9mm. Additionally, to accommodate the larger cartridge, the slide, barrel, and chamber mass was reduced. The result is a less reliable weapon system, more parts breakage, and a shorter life cycle.

There are very few handgun weapon systems originally designed around something other than 9mm or .45 ACP cartridges. And even fewer that have seen extended use by large organizations.

Some of the platforms to consider (all in 9mm) are: Glock 17, Glock 19, Glock 34, Beretta 92FS, Sig 226, Sig228, Sig229, Browning Hi-Power, most of the H&K handguns, and the S&W M&P9

There are probably more, and I am sure I left your favorite gun off the above list. However, in our cumulative experience seeing hundreds of guns every year with hundreds of thousands of rounds down range every year, these are the guns we see with the least problems.

Along with reliability, the ability to deliver fast accurate hits to your target is crucial to surviving a violent confrontation. With experienced skilled shooters and novice shooters alike, we see students shoot faster and more accurate with 9mm than any other defensive cartridge. It is quite common for a student to come to class with a .40 caliber Glock, during the course they borrow a Glock 19 and quickly learn the error in their ways. The .40 caliber Glock gets sold shortly thereafter and replaced with a Glock 19.

Next Post: Glock 19

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Point Shooting

Caleb had some observations about point shooting. Since we have already done the caliber debate, I guess it is time for aimed fire vs. point shooting.

Point shooting is awesome if you can index the muzzle of the gun almost against the target, but performance with this technique tends to degrade as you increase the distance, or reduce the size of the target.

Go to a public range and observe a new shooter shooting a B27 silhouette and observe the “you would have got him in the kidney, that one would have hit is spleen” school of target scoring. Apparently the expectation is that the husky assailant will stand flat-footed and squared up to the shooter at a given distance, while the shooter punctures non-vital parts of anatomy.

If we fold the B27 in half (lengthwise), we simulate a husky bad guy that has partial cover. Is point shooting still getting enough hits on the target to stop the fight? What if we start ignoring the parts of the B27 that are non-vital? How much time is there between the buzzer and the first hit to the vitals and what would the bad guy be doing with that time?

Targets and scoring systems have a lot of bearing on this equation as well. If we count everything in the black on a B27 as a “hit” then there is no benefit to being able to shoot a 1″ group in eye-socket that our scoring system can measure (assuming the same times and distances.)

The objective is to get a “good enough” sight picture to make the shot in question. If you make your targets big and close enough then you don’t need much of a sight picture to hit them. As your targets get smaller or farther away then your sight picture becomes more important.

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