I really get tired of this argument. A well placed bullet of any kind is deadly.
I won't be charging you unarmed whether you're using a .22 or a .50 cal.
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he asked a question as to my background infering it was non existant and I replied well yes I have some background. maybe not a lot but some. maybe he has a point. But I remember the discussion by the army types shitting on the M-16 as the shot was so small it took many shots to bring someone down.
How to stop a gunman?
You stop a gunman with extreme violence and prejudice.
Or, just allow him to execute people until he runs out of bullets
Eastside
very true I don't think anyone is saying anything different than that. But it would depend on the situation if it was well aimed.
If I was walking along and heard shots and then saw people running toward me. Very clear I would do a 180 and run as fast as I could. I would not go Rambo style and climb into a locker or behind a potted plant armed with a pointed stick or a banana. I was only thinking of the situation in the Montreal shooting. There maybe and only if I came to the conclusion in a very short period that those girls were going to be shot.
I'm guessing the answer is that the .22 is more likely to cause death.
Most people are terrible shots. A .50 shot at the body will go through very easily. It's like the guys that were written about in Black Hawk Down, they were using .50 and other high powered ammo and they would shoot the enemy and the bullets would go right through them, knocking them down temporarily, but not killing them.
A .22 round shot at the body will enter the body, bounce off bones and maybe then bounce off muscle, causing a lot more damage due to the bullet being ricocheted around the body.
A head shot with a .50 will be more deadly, but because most peeps on the street are not good shots, the .22 is more likely to cause death.
Is that right?
but doesn't a .50 leave a big GD hole?? Interesting point. But why do armies use the higher cal. killing range?? I thought the switch to whatever is in the M-16 from the 7.6 mm was so more bullets could be carried and shot. The power of quantity over quality. I have no idea but interesting point.
IIRC the bullets that weren't stopping people unless they hit the spine or head mentioned in BHD were some sort of smaller caliber armor-piercing thing, not .50 cal, and not the normal standard-issue anti-personnel (?) round that mushrooms and causes more damage on impact. I haven't read the book in a while but again, I seem to remember that the soldiers in question were pissed that their targets weren't going down instantly when hit, which made them unsure if they had killed that particular target or not.
I do also recall reading time and time again that a .50 cal bullet will pretty much destroy a human.
Actually, the blackhawk down thing was more about the type of ammo than the size. The problem was that they were issued armor piercing ammo, and also that the last mission, the one that went wrong, tookplace in the afternoon when all the somalis were high as shit on some local drug, so they wouldn't go down.
Besides, that was about the 223s the soldiers were carrying, NOT the fucking 50 cals. A 50cal will take your ass down, end of story. It hits with enough force that even the impact of it, not the penetration, is enough to break lots of bones. A 22 might kill you, if you get hit in the head, heart, or an artery, but even if you get hit in the head with a 22, its not definitly going to kill you. You get hit in the head with a 50, and I don't think you really have a fuckign head any more.
And don't give me that shit about how a 22 will bounce around inside your body, thats a load of shit. A 22, even a 22 rifle round, is underpowered. A 223 (basically a super magnumed 22) WILL frgment and bounce around inside you, but still, a 22 just isn't enough metal to do much damage unless you get hit somewhere very specific.
EDIT: You fucker hop. Look at the big fancy rant I had all prepared. Thanks for stealing my thunder.
hehehe. As for the local drug, it's Khat or Mira (in Kenya). Fun stuff... I posted a story about chewing it with the local police in Nanyuki at some point. It's an upper. Whee! Edit: maybe they should have sat on them and tazed them instead of shooting them? [/not funny]
Here's some background on it. http://www.unodc.org/unodc/bulletin/...html?print=yes
Comparison of rounds in .223 from some gun site. Covers some of the crap you guys are trying to say but not getting it.
M193 – The old US Military 5.56 standard. A 55gr bullet of lead with a copper jacket.
M855 – The new US Military standard, also a NATO standard. M855 is a 62gr projectile, lead with a steel core and a copper jacket.
Despite what the media, Bruce Willis, and Arnold Schwarzenegger may suggest, the only certain way to incapacitate an attacker is to cause significant damage to the Central Nervous System, or cause enough loss of blood to shut down the attacker's higher (and potentially lower) brain functions. There are certainly psychological factors that might stop an attacker ("I've been shot!"), but depending on these is probably not a good idea, and discounts the possibility that the attacker's state of mind is altered chemically or emotionally to a point where being shot won't seem like that interesting a distraction. That means you want to:
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Penetrate deep enough to get to major organs or blood vessels.
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Disrupt the tissue of those structures.
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Encourage profuse bleeding and/or CNS damage.
After a great deal of study, and the conclusion that their then-current 9mm duty loads were a failure for their purposes, the FBI set up a comprehensive set of ballistics testing protocols. These represent a very good model to judge a rounds performance by. The FBI protocols use 12 inches as a penetration minimum in calibrated ballistic gelatin and looked for consistent 12"-18" penetration as an ideal. As a general matter, major vessels and organs can be reliably damaged with 6 inches of penetration. Ideally, then, you want a wound profile that penetrates at least 12" and does most of its damage between 4" and 12" of penetration. Of course, its always more effective to leave entry and exit holes to encourage bleeding. Shot placement is always important as well. No round will do you any good in the wall next to the attacker.
Unlike most FMJ rounds, M193 and M855's primary wounding mechanism is fragmentation. This is a good thing because without fragmentation these rounds otherwise would act like a ice pick and cause very little damage because of their small size. At the proper velocity, both M855 and M193 strike flesh and immediately begin to yaw (tumble). Contrary to rumor and popular media belief, this is not unique to these rounds. All FMJ bullets with tapered noses will tumble in flesh with enough velocity, because their center of gravity is aft of their length center--causing them to want to travel "tail first" in denser mediums (like water and tissue).
If the rounds are moving fast enough when they yaw to about 90 degrees of their original trajectory the stress on the bullet from traveling sideways through a dense medium (tissue) will overcome the structural integrity of the bullet and it will start to break up.
If the velocity is high enough this breaking up is pretty dramatic and causes equally dramatic wounds. This is because the fragments travel rapidly through the temporarily crushed tissue and tear it. Most tissue is very elastic and will stretch quite far before returning to its normal shape (this is called the temporary crush cavity) but the addition of quickly moving fragments makes permanent the cavity that might otherwise have returned after the impact and therefore creates a much larger wound.
This is a worthless argument. None of you were there, none of you have ever experienced anything remotely close to this, and unless you have been in real combat with real bullets flying passed your head; you have no clue what you are talking aboot. You can say all you want aboot what you would do if you were in that situation, but if you were there you would probably be dead too. And so would I. End of story.
Even though lobster and I are polar opposites with regard to gun control I agree with him that our reality for dealing with these situations is provided by our media outlets. TV, movies, games. Games are especially helpfull 'cause we can replay the scenario (when's the VT game coming out anyone ?) and refine our tactical responses like secreting a gun behind the radiator and finding out it's too hot to handle (it's cold outside) so we have to get gloves. But ski gloves don't work because we can't get our finger on the trigger so we need thin leather gloves. But students don't have thin leather gloves so we need to get them from the professor. And so on. It's a game remember.
Dude, he's Canadian. Don't hate on his accent.
I'm with Roo on this, except from a Southern Hemispherical perspective. FWIW, the Australian general public perspective is obviously very different to the American. Our worst mass murder in recent history prompted gun law reform in the opposite direction to that advocated by the majority here.
except for the name calling and accent ridicule, of course.
I understand what you are saying, but I think you are being a bit dramatic. You don't wear your seatbelt because you are terrified of being injured in an auto accident. You wear it because it is the prudent thing to do. The same thing is true for 99.9% of the people I know who own/carry a firearm.
FWIW, I'm 35. I have never carried a gun in public, nor have I ever felt the need for one. In fact, I don't even own a gun and haven't had a firearm in my place of residence since I left my parents house to go to college when I was 19.
The media can give the impression of America as a killing field. It simply isn't.