mreavis wrote:Warhammer wrote:mreavis wrote:The only thing that matters for "knock down" is foot pounds of force. Look up a .40cal, a +p+ 9mm, and a 45 +p. As I agreed with originally, because of the 45s slightly larger size and weight yes it has the highest amount. But its minimal at best.
Ok, the strongest loads (measured in muzzle energy) for each caliber from Buffalo Bore:
9mm Luger (SKU: 24A/20) - 500 ft.lbs
.40 S&W (SKU: 23A/20) - 582 ft. lbs.
.45 ACP (SKU: 45-185/20) - 543 ft. lbs.
So, if foot pounds is the end-all, be-all measurement of a bullet's worth, how again is .40 S&W "the worst round you could get" among these three?
Those numbers are not correct including +p, and +p+. They are much closer together, and from what I have read, aside from hand loaded, the 40 is the lowest compared to the hottest 45, and 9's. Some of the material I read may have been flawed as well, but I can tell you just from 5 minutes on wiki those numbers are not correct for the hotter marketed shells.
Those are the numbers published by Buffalo Bore for their own loads. Why would they undersell the performance of rounds they are touting as extra-powerful? And yes, those are 9mm +p+, and .45 +p loads. If your research is based on sources like wikipedia, I can understand your confusion. (There's a reason why colleges won't accept Wikipedia as a reference on papers tuened in by their students.) You really sparked my interest in this, so I did some research (more than 5 minutes) based on the manufacturers' own data. Now, that is comparing each manufacturer's hottest (+p or +p+) 9mm, .40 and .45 against themselves (ie: Federal vs. Federal, Winchester vs. Winchester, etc...). I didn't compare across manufacturers, since that would not account for differences in measuring methods. Based on the published data from Buffalo Bore, Winchester, Federal, Cor-Bon, and Remington, your claim just doesn't hold water. Now, if you're comparing off the shelf .40 with handloaded 9mm that has been uploaded to higher pressures, then sure, you can build a 9mm that's more powerful than an off the shelf .40. However, most aren't into handloading wildcat cartidges to dangerous levels for our EDC gun. As I've stated
several times, many 9mm handguns can't handle +p ammo, and even fewer can safely handle +p+. Making a judgement on a caliber based on what
can be done in very limited circumstances, rather than what
is done most of the time is flawed reasoning.
"Broad-minded is just another way of saying a fellow is too lazy to form an opinion." - Rogers, Will