The Underappreciated .32 Magnums | An Official Journal Of The NRA
https://www.americanrifleman.org/con...ed-32-magnums/
The Underappreciated .32 Magnums | An Official Journal Of The NRA
https://www.americanrifleman.org/con...ed-32-magnums/
If ammo was of equal supply and equal cost, then no question I would opt for the .32. Less recoil and and an extra round would make it worth it, especially in a revolver that could be as small and light as possible.
Since .32 is far from king, I think .38 and 9mm revolvers make more sense for most people.
If the .32 becomes more popular and manufacturers really push the round and revolvers in it, then we can have some real change.
We need some “influencers” who realize that many, if not most, shooters would be better off with quality revolvers and triggers that aren’t “nice” 4 pound short pull triggers.
I am not Rob, but when I load the 38 SC in my 550 I use the Lee 38 SC sizing die in station 1, a 9mm powder die in station 2, a 38 SC seating die in station 3, and a 9mm factory crimp die in station 4.
In my mid 1980s GP100 I shot some 9mm 124 Montana Gold JHP loaded in 38 SC brass and did not have any accuracy issues out to 10 yards (the max range for pistols at my range).
Video games brought the 5.7 to life and have created a generation that know nothing about revolvers.
When one goes to a gun store with other young people behind the counter, and almost no revolvers in the case, and a first time buyer who is video game /movie educated…..is that dude going to be switched to a 5 or 6 gun?
38 Special DT SnakeShot™ 20rds – Doubletap Ammunition
https://doubletapammo.com/products/3...nakeshot-20rds
Does a 32 HR Mag perform better than an extremely light .38, such as Hornady's Critical Defense lite?
Comparing the American Rifleman results to the 2" barrel revolver test from Brass Fetcher...
https://www.americanrifleman.org/med...708&height=594
https://www.brassfetcher.com/Handgun...Selection.html
Most 32 H&R Magnum loads will probably penetrate to roughly 38 Special 148 grain wadcutter depths of 15-16 inches and with similar average recovered bullet diameters of .38-.39 inches.
The 80 grain Critical Defense 32 H&R Magnum performs slightly better than the 90 grain Critical Defense Lite in 38 Special and slightly worse than the standard pressure 110 grain Hornady loading with average penetrations of 10 inches and .41-.46 inches of expansion.
Last edited by Velo Dog; 01-27-2024 at 10:16 PM.
The Lost River wadcutter doesn't have optimized contours to maximize terminal effects.
The meplat MUST be flat with a SHARP shoulder.
I'd like to see a solid copper machined wadcutter for battle carry (i.e. loaded in the cylinder).
Then I'd like to see a solid-copper Keith-style semiwadcutter, with a sharp meplat shoulder, for reloads.
These designs will maximize wounding effects and make the bullets barrier blind.
No need to propel either of these bullets any faster than needed to penetrate 16-inches in properly prepared and calibrated Type 250A ordnance gelatin.