|
|
|
#8 | |
|
Doctor of GURPS Ballistics
Join Date: Sep 2004
Location: Lakeville, MN
|
Quote:
By and large, if you have to shoot at someone in your home, you're going to want them just as dead as if you're shooting at them in combat. You ARE in combat. So, depending on what you're doing: For random "someone's breaking into my house" home defense, a shotgun or pistol is good. You likely won't be going through ten clips worth of ammo or nothing; one or two defenders vs a small number of attackers (often one) will be the most likely scenario. Any sort of man-stopping pistol would do, and the .22LR and probably even the .22WMR are both not really in that category. Pretty much anything pi- will not be. The .22WMR at 40gr and 580m/s is 2d+2 pi-. Given soft lead, though, rather than jacketed, it's likely to be worse at armor penetration than usual FMJ type rounds, although less of a spreading bullet than a designed hollow point. My calcs have the Five-seveN at 2d+1; it's a bit lighter in weight and not appreciably different in velocity. However, recently I found this website: http://www.eliteammunition.net/catal...14/7701258.htm where some aftermarket guys are loading 45 and 55 grain bullets to 1975 and 1800fps out of the 5-7 PISTOL. That might get you the 2d+3 pi rating; the lighter, faster more than the slower one (you need a certain velocity to fragment), but both if properly designed for fragmentation will be pretty comparable to 9mm or even 10mm in penetration, and equivalent to .45ACP in wounding. Can't ask much more of a pistol with 20 rounds in it...
__________________
My blog:Gaming Ballistic, LLC My Store: Gaming Ballistic on Shopify My Patreon: Gaming Ballistic on Patreon |
|
|
|
|
| Tags |
| ballistics, gun, high tech, high-tech, pistol, rifle |
|
|