In .40, for AK field use, I would go with the Underwood load with the Lehigh extreme penetrator bullet, 140 grains at 1,200 fps. It is a purpose built penetrating load that feeds reliably in a wide range of pistols we have tried it in. I am not confident .40 JHP will get through the skull of a brown bear.
Likes pretty much everything in every caliber.
Exactly. That's sort of what I was hoping we'd get with Federal's Trophy Bonded load: a bullet designed with 10mm in mind, going for the deep side of penetration, but that wasn't what we got.
The 200 grain XTP is a decent hunting bullet and will get you that kind of penetration and expansion, but the technology is long in the tooth and won't get you the intermediate barrier penetration.
I'm guessing the market just isn't there for a modern, 200 grain, barrier blind dual purpose 10mm bullet. The round has enjoyed a renaissance of late, but its largely among people who are doing goofy shit like carrying it for their CCW loaded with 135 grain bullets going at crazy speeds because "energy dump."
The Glock 20 mags are currently stuffed with 175 Grain Critical duty for general purpose carry.
I was into 10mm Auto before it sold out and went mainstream, but these days I'm here for the revolver and epidemiology information.
I was into 10mm Auto before it sold out and went mainstream, but these days I'm here for the revolver and epidemiology information.
In 2006 I chrongraphed my NYPD issued Speer GD 124+P from my 3913. Elevation was about 2000ft, five shots Average 1168 ES 66.7
Speer again got back to me on a very timely basis (kudos to them); what they said was,
"Jon, the longer the barrel the faster the barrel till it reaches the maximum powder burn, then you will lose velocity. So the answer is that you will get get really similar velocities in both rounds, out of the same barrel lengths. You just get proper expansion in the short barrel (My note-I think here he's referring specifically to the Short Barrel 124 gr +P cartridge-Jon) when shot out of a short barrel weapon, You can get over penetration from under and over expansion. If you under expand the bullet doesn't open fully and you get over expansion (My note-I think here what he actually meant to say was "over penetration," not "over expansion"-Jon) If you over expand the bullet will lay back over itself and give you a smaller diameter, which leads to over penetration."
I hope my parenthetical comments are correct, and not misinterpreting or muddling what the Speer Rep was saying.
The Speer Rep's comments essentially track and validate what Sensei laid out in post #17 earlier. (Kudos to you, Sensei).
It also seems to establish that there are in fact some crucial differences between the Speer 124gr Gold Dot +P and the Speer Short Barrel 124 gr Gold Dot +P, and that you should judiciously apply your choice and selection process in line with your specific gun's barrel length for maximum effective results, especially for defensive use.
Best, Jon
Last edited by JonInWA; 07-26-2017 at 06:00 PM.