A longer barrel is more conducive to pistol whipping.
Now that is a remark I can agree to.......:tooth:
It's only true if it's on this forum where opinions are facts and facts are opinions
Words of wisdom from Big Chief: Flush twice, it's a long way to the Mess Hall
I'd rather have my sister work in a whorehouse than own another Taurus!
Personal defense as in around the house or something you want to conceal on your person? A smaller barrel is obviously easier to conceal.
Ah yes, BUT short 2" bbls are hard(er) to hit with because of the sight radius. In a house it really doesn't, matter anything from 2" up to 8 3/8" will work. CCW on your person is another story.
It has been said a 5" bbl is ideal for a revolver to carry openly/shoot with. Why not many were ever made with 5" tubes is a mystery to me. Usually you can go down to 4" or up to 6".
I do own a pre-model 10 S&W .38 spl and a modern S&W model 625 in .45 ACP with 5" tubes. Of course, the 1911s are with a 5" bbl.
It's only true if it's on this forum where opinions are facts and facts are opinions
Words of wisdom from Big Chief: Flush twice, it's a long way to the Mess Hall
I'd rather have my sister work in a whorehouse than own another Taurus!
is there significant difference in handgun barrel length? this is for personal defense.:usa:
If you are buying for home defense only:
Buy a full-size pistol. Most notably, you get full-size round capacities such as 17+1 in a Glock 17, 15+1 in a Glock 22 and 19+1 in the XDM 9MM. Additionally, they aren't as cumbersome to add things like lights or lasers to as the larger frame size balances the slight offset in weight better. Full-size pistols tame recoil more than compact pistols do. A longer sight radius with some tritium sights would be good.
If you are buying for concealment AND home defense:
If you can't afford two pistols right now, consider your body type and buy a pistol you can conceal on your person reasonably well that still have a decent round capacity. Since compact pistols typically have less rounds that full-size ones, keeping extra magazines in the house that you can grab at the same time as the gun is a good idea.
The purchase of ANY gun is subjective to the prospective buyer and even more so when looking for a gun for EDC. You'll need to shop around regardless and find the one best for you. Look for gun ranges that offer rentals and try out a few before you commit money to any one purchase.
-Jason
“There are three kinds of men. The one that learns by reading. The few who learn by observation. The rest of them have to pee on the electric fence for themselves.” – Will Rogers
I hunted with a guy once that showed up at deer camp with a Dan Wesson .44 mag that had a 12" barrel. The gun sat in a holster that went to his knee, he told me his gun was better because he could hit me at 100 yards with his wheel gun. I told him I could probably draw and empty my 1911 in him before he could clear leather with that monster. a short siht radius is better in slef defense, you ain't gonna shoot that far in that situation.
timc - formerly known as timc on the last G&A forum and timc on the G&A forum before that and the G&A forum before that.....
AKA: Former Founding Member
There is a site called "Ballistic's by the Inch" where they had taken several common handgun calibers and chronographed them at various barrel lengths to compile data on velocity and energy differences between barrel lengths.
Never argue with stupid people, they will drag you down to their level and then beat you with experience -- Mark Twain How easy it is to make people believe a lie, and [how] hard it is to undo that work again! -- Mark Twain
Replies
Now that is a remark I can agree to.......:tooth:
Words of wisdom from Big Chief: Flush twice, it's a long way to the Mess Hall
I'd rather have my sister work in a whorehouse than own another Taurus!
Ah yes, BUT short 2" bbls are hard(er) to hit with because of the sight radius. In a house it really doesn't, matter anything from 2" up to 8 3/8" will work. CCW on your person is another story.
It has been said a 5" bbl is ideal for a revolver to carry openly/shoot with. Why not many were ever made with 5" tubes is a mystery to me. Usually you can go down to 4" or up to 6".
I do own a pre-model 10 S&W .38 spl and a modern S&W model 625 in .45 ACP with 5" tubes. Of course, the 1911s are with a 5" bbl.
Words of wisdom from Big Chief: Flush twice, it's a long way to the Mess Hall
I'd rather have my sister work in a whorehouse than own another Taurus!
Money is not speech, corporations are not people, and wealth does not trickle down.
Ernie gets interested and screws the market driving prices up.
If you are buying for home defense only:
Buy a full-size pistol. Most notably, you get full-size round capacities such as 17+1 in a Glock 17, 15+1 in a Glock 22 and 19+1 in the XDM 9MM. Additionally, they aren't as cumbersome to add things like lights or lasers to as the larger frame size balances the slight offset in weight better. Full-size pistols tame recoil more than compact pistols do. A longer sight radius with some tritium sights would be good.
If you are buying for concealment AND home defense:
If you can't afford two pistols right now, consider your body type and buy a pistol you can conceal on your person reasonably well that still have a decent round capacity. Since compact pistols typically have less rounds that full-size ones, keeping extra magazines in the house that you can grab at the same time as the gun is a good idea.
The purchase of ANY gun is subjective to the prospective buyer and even more so when looking for a gun for EDC. You'll need to shop around regardless and find the one best for you. Look for gun ranges that offer rentals and try out a few before you commit money to any one purchase.
-Jason
I hunted with a guy once that showed up at deer camp with a Dan Wesson .44 mag that had a 12" barrel. The gun sat in a holster that went to his knee, he told me his gun was better because he could hit me at 100 yards with his wheel gun. I told him I could probably draw and empty my 1911 in him before he could clear leather with that monster. a short siht radius is better in slef defense, you ain't gonna shoot that far in that situation.
AKA: Former Founding Member
Here's the link:
http://ballisticsbytheinch.com/
How easy it is to make people believe a lie, and [how] hard it is to undo that work again! -- Mark Twain
And adds on a rifle scope and a brake.....and a bi-pod.....and then Zed gets one....and... :head: