After about the 4th, 5th, 6th comment that is the same comment of "Your gun is junk, not the ammo with the light primer strike", I feel the need to respond. And my response is this - While I don't think Taurus is the best gun out there, I have owned this revolver and been shooting it regularly since 2019 and I do not recall ever having a misfire in it up until this video. After I filmed this video a couple weeks ago I been shooting it more I also have not had a misfire in it. And why would I? I keep getting comments about strain screws and the like....IT'S A TAURUS SMALL FRAME, it doesn't use a strain screw. It is coil spring to hammer to transfer bar to firing pin. It's a very reliable revolver. Just stop embarrassing yourselves with the "it's your gun" comments because it makes you look stupid. There's nothing mechanically there that could cause a light strike and even if this were somehow the cause, the gun not firing just two Hornady rounds with zero issues with the Gold Dot would be a statistical unlikelihood.
I suspect you hit an extremely unlikely case where the primers were not completely seated. The first strike finished seating them and the second detonated them. This is of course strictly wild guessing. It is my understanding that ammunition manufacturers are running 24x7 to keep up with demand. Primers are the most sensitive component for error. And the hardest to get. Given the random nature of such things, you may not have this happen again for a hundred years. Or it could happen tomorrow. And you might not be able to tell by eye ahead of time if the primer is fully seated as the tolerances are in thousandths of an inch, as you know.
What makes matters worse is that I think I did fire them after the fact in single action as where the duds were in double action. There's just that tiny bit more hammer travel and force in single action. It's possible that the average UA-camr would have never had an issue (cock gun every shot, shoot, break grip cock with strong hand lol). I would bet that single action could finish seating them and set them off at the same time.
@@GunSam I can't discount that as a possible reason why the rounds fired on re-strike. Given that the S&W 642/442 are DAO, just pulling the trigger again would have been your only option. And I suspect that among J-Frame size revolvers, those Airlights are about as popular as snub nose 38s get. The same principle would apply. A highly stressed shooter might cycle through a bit before realizing it's time to do a reload. IIRC, Bernhard Goetz fired at least four shots before getting out of Dodge (NYC). It's kind of difficult to say things came out in his favor. But he did survive.
Of the two I would take the Gold dot. In a lot of the testing I've seen the plastic tip rounds seem pretty fickle. But honestly my inclination is to stick with lead WC or SWC rounds. You get reliable penetration and the flat meplat gives good damage without having to depend on expansion.
I currently own a NIB S&W J frame Bodyguard .38spl . In short, I'd say the Speer Gold Dot 135gr +P JHP. This ammunition was R&Ded with the NYPD. 2000s. I also like the 110gr +P DPX, Critical Defense 110gr. Older frangible. 38 rounds like Magsafe SWAT or Glaser Silver slugs are + but they cost a lot. I carry Golden Saber 125gr +P. I could not see any 135gr Gold Dot.
A flat nose lead bullet tends to create a large permanent wound cavity upon entry. The shock factor, often ends the fight quickly, rather than depending on hitting a vital organ. That is part of the reasoning behind the .45acp round. The idea of making someone absolutely not want to get shot twice.
the 135gr Speer Gold Dot load you briefly mentioned was designed to work properly from snub nose revolvers, hence it is labeled amongst their short barrel family of offerings; NYPD asked Speer for this load to use in their issued & spproved list of snub nosed revolvers prior to switching to 9mm semiautos exclusively
Something important to remember about ballistic gel: it is not intended to replicate human tissue. It provides a repeatable, consistent medium to scientifically gauge bullet expansion and performance. Bullets which consistently penetrate between 12”-18” *and* expand at least nearly double its original size *tend* to provide reliable results in stopping people.
gel is made to replicate the same resistance, what happens to a bullet. If gel was not intended to replicate flesh, no one would use it. It's not a 1:1 penetration, but it does indeed replicate flesh.
My grandfather carried the Winchester 158 lswc hp +p as his duty load. Cor-bon or Buffalo bore make good versions. I personally carry the Buffalo Bore version in my M10 Smith.
From Mike I've been watching your channel for a while now. I appreciate your consistency in testing at your range. Velocities. Accuracy. Gel tests with and without ply. I know you're helping alot of fans to make responsible and practical decisions about what to expect or not from firearms available today. Good work. Thanks...
Love this channel. Either one of these rounds is fine, as is the swchp, as is a full wadcutter. Pick what you like. Shot placement rules above all and always will. Pick a decent round and hit them right. Same goes for hunting rounds. No need to split hairs to this degree IMO!
Many have derided a .38 for being inadequate but that runs contrary to my OIS experience on the street. The round you’re featuring is what I carry in my 340PD b/c it’s easy to handle in a 12 ounce J Frame. Thx for another instructive presentation Sam.
I am interested in the +p critical defense of the idea of the polymer keeping it from getting clogged with clothing. but I've seen 9mm critical defense working as an fmj
I still loved the results of the +p buffalo bores and I'm not sure I want to change ammo at this time. I do have some XTP rounds in box too. They were accurate as hell! But I want more power I think. I feel that under stress I won't notice much difference at shorter distances and I want to leave the biggest OUCH I can from my taurus 856
As a scientist I feel the need to express that the majority of UA-cam tests aren’t truly scientific. Most are anecdotal at best. Firing 4 or 5 rounds isn’t enough to get a valid result. Go ahead and flip a coin 5 times and see, you might end up with 4 tails and one heads meaning heads up only happens 20% of the time. We know that’s not the odds but only if we flip it a hundred or more times. Gun Sam is great and I really enjoy his demonstrations, but if you’re going to trust your life on something testing a few hundred examples would be more reliable.
I try to shoot down Hill or take a running Start so it's 900ft per second. Plus my moving forward so its 900 ft per second plus my 9 Miles a hour makes a difference
If you just start with the muzzle at the sky and whip your arms down as fast as possible depressing the trigger once the muzzle is level, you will add even more velocity.
Great video. What's got me really interested in light and fast vs slow and heavy is Mr GunsNGear posted a disturbing video on twitter. A very large man assaulted a much smaller person. He had the guy against a car with the door open, effectively pinning him. So he slammed the little guy who then went to draw from an appendix style holster. The big guy tried to crush the little guy with the door, but the little guy managed to get shots off and break contact. Depending on camera angle, he either fired five or seven rounds. I don't know what he had. But he prevailed. As you can imagine, when you have only five, you want them to work. I think some of the shots were superfluous, but that's a tough call. My take away from that particular incident was that you need each round to be doing real damage to force a break in contact. The big guy was more than large enough to kill the little guy bare handed. I'm no street fighter. If I can't avoid the situation, I really need the "get off me" power. And I want it to work sooner rather than later.
Here and there you here of those exceptions. There is also a story about a cop who had a gun fight with someone which he hit 5 times with 45 ACP and he was still shooting back. He even hit vital organs. That last shot that took him down was actually a head shot.
@@nicholasroberts9618 Its not the caliber! I have read from a leo that he did know another cop who was killed in a gun fight. He had a 4 inch revolver and fired all his 6 shots into the chest at close range but the thug was still able to shot back and run away. Sometimes I think firearms are a bit overrated.
@@nicholasroberts9618 It was .357 Mag. The 45 ACP story is well documented search for "Sergeant Timothy Gramins" You also can find some interviews about stopping power with old reputable cops. I also can remeber another one where somebody was hit in the chest by a 44 Mag still able to run away but collapsed afte 1-2 miles but also survived. There are some statistics that show that there are no significant differences in one shot stops from handgun calibers from 380 acp up to 357 mag. Al I say was that there isnt a magical caliber you can rely on. And you actually confirmed that. ( those rounds were stopped by a Carhart Duck Quill work jacket. I dont belive you. This is BS²)
I also think for normal self defense frontal hits 9-10 inches are still enough and with this expansion even better. But the Federal HST Micro expands even more (0.7) and has also good penetration.
I picked up a 340pd last week and have been rewatching your old .38 special videos ever since. While I would like to use .357 in those titanium cylinders to avoid having to clean up carbon rings, I don’t see why. I’m between the hornady critical defense +p and underwood’s 125gr xtp .38spl +p. Both are accurate from the 340,but those underwood’s definitely stand out. Keep up the great content.
I always trust personal experience over what an ad on the box says. Advertisements and companies have been known to lie in order to make their products more appealing. Hence why I love these extensive ammo tests.
Good job Sam, I will stay with my hand loads for my 38 spl. 1 7/8" S&W mod 36 those would be a 148 gr BBWC with 3.6gr of Alliant Bullseye and a F100 primer.
When ballistic testing used pigs most standard bullet weights and velocities were established. Modern Self Defense cartridges are based on Ballistic Gallatin. Military ballistic requirements do not have a fear of an exit hole. Police ballistic requirements require no exit hole do to legal reasons. Civilian Self Defense requirements are Similar to LEO’s. With all of these things to consider the low penetration and high number of hits seems to be a prudent Self Defense cartridge for urban scenarios where an exiting bullet cannot happen. This is where a 38 and a 380 become perfect. Multiple hits are easy for most shooters with these calibers. So it might be a good test for you explore further.
Excellent synopsis at the beginning! (But regarding the bullet weights, Buffalo Bore and Underwood both load 158 grain rounds that expand magnificently from a snub-nose, they just have unmanageable recoil from a light carry gun--all of which our host knows as well as I do.)
Thankyou for proving once again what an important resource you are to the shooting community! Your work is SO detailed and well researched, and SO well explained that everyone from beginners to experts benefit from it. Seriously, be proud of your art! (also you don't wave flags around to prove what a great Patriot you are, and you don't shout "YAOW'ALLLLL" every sentence).............................elsullo
Thanks. I am one of the few gun guys not from Tennessee and Kentucky lol. Another guy here in MI not far from me is "The Firearms Guy" "HEY THERE FRIENDS" lol
I like the The Firearms Guy’s videos. Really like his “limp wrist test”. When I saw him do that, I accused him of copying my normal shooting style, heh heh.
The guy who's accent you made fun of does some of the best ammo testing on YT. I like this channel quite a bit, great work with revolvers which is why I watch. But to dismiss the other guy because of his accent? JSMH.
When the Federal HST load for micro revolvers came out, it was very reliable in ballistic gel from the snub nose length barrels. The NYPD Speer Gold Dot load had a good reputation from officer involved shootings. My department issued Remington SWCHP 158 grain +P for the older veterans who carried a snub nosed for off duty or back up. The lead was softer and would expand compared to the same load offering from Federal or Winchester.
I tried hollow points in my j-frame and they didn’t work very well. The expansion isn’t consistent. Just for fun I loaded a 126 grain black talon in 38 special and I used the same bullet for my 357 mag. The38 special penetrated 10 inches but no expansion, the 357 with a 4 inch barrel penetrated 12 inches but the wound channel was huge. For my j-frame I use 158 grain soft cast wadcutters. They aren’t going fast but they do a lot of damage.
Massad Ayoob among others, 1980s 1990s said the 158gr lead SWC HP +P was ✔️. I used the Buffalo Bore .38spl in the 2000s. I'm not crazy about lead, SWC lead bullets; hard to clean, lead-smoke.
@@DavidLLambertmobile common hard cast bevel base is just about the worst lead bullet . Matts Bullets is one place to get different hardness & flat base , the way it should be . Hard cast is best for high vel , but with the right size & flat or near flat base , they can be very good . The med hard lead is the best for most use , most don't offer it .
I get why Gun Sam uses Taurus. He’s explained it before. For these videos purposes, they’re fine. That said, if you’re going to get any revolver, get a Ruger or S&W if this is going to be your “save my ass” revolver. As for ammo in .38 in a snubbie, that’s a crap shoot. I like hard cast heavy for caliber wad flat nosed cutters OR, semi jacketed wad cutters also heavy for caliber. 158 grain. JHP I think undercuts penetration which is key but this means you also need to have more accurate hits in vitals with non hollow points. Just my opinion ion.
I carry with Critical Defense in all my revolvers and most of my Semi autos. They are a good round and I never have a problem with them. They are a well designed round .
As always a great video. Gets right to the numbers and I appreciate you shooting a snub. Tired of watching guys test 4"+ barrels on protection ammo. I don't know anyone carrying a 5" .38 ...haha.
I get it with hi vel hp's with the expansion. I load my 38's (or32's) with good old wadcutters. They'll punch a CLEAN HOLE through the target, paper or mammals... Not a "stopper" but rather a major ventilator or plumbing leaker...and make the target think twice about the emergency room...sorry to the bad guys...😢
Over on a Ruger Forum the subject of bad primers and lower powder amounts tan advertised came up. I'll skip the powder. I have no way of knowing. The short story is that all of the factory loads had an occasional light strike or dud. As it happens yesterday at the range I had 2 light strikes from Federal HST. I've had in the past light strikes with a couple of others. I assumed it was limited to those brands. Then the reloaders jumped in stating that their old primers of all brands were fine but the new stuff had problems. It appears that demand exceeded quality control. I consider snubbies as either belly guns or ohmygawd guns. Up close and personal and at least the double tap. As usual I can't see any responses. Thanks for the video Mr. Sam.
Your personal gun has a lot to do with ammo selection if hitting to point of aim is an important consideration to you. My guns are all older and were regulated for 158 grain bullets so anything under about 140 hits too low for my preference. So, I stick with 148 wadcutters but, the Golden saber is a good round as is the Hornady mainly because its conical shape is less prone to hangups when reloading which is why I carry it for reloads since reloading is such a highly unlikely event, I put up with the POI/POA issue. Thanks for your videos.
I was getting roughly the penetration I got with these Critical Defense with about that 3/4" expansion. I have noticed for maybe a year that Federal has had them listed as discontinued. They were okay, but I think Federal could have done better. I would say the Punch is a bit better as it's more powerful, seems to be similar to the traditional HST.
👍Good vid for me as i own a snubbie 2in 357 rev. I always chose Hornandy or Liberty ammo. The price difference is worth your life. Can't understand people who invest in a 800$ pistol or rev and shoot shit ammo.Thks for the vid.✌🇺🇲🇺🇲
I haven't found a factory load for 2" or shorter barrels that I actually like. I run a 135 grain Gold Dot and Silhouette powder (flash suppressed and one of the best powders for +P). I get over 940 FPS average from a 1 7/8" Ruger LCR. Exceptional load; accurate and expansion and penetration are just about as good as you can get from a snubby (over .5" and 15-17" in clear gel/fabric).
@@bonsaw57 The LCR weighs 13.3 ounces, and I have no issue making fast and accurate follow up shots thanks to lots of practice (with lower-recoiling stuff) and good technique. These ARE punishing for sure, but I don't shoot them for fun, and I'd rather have a sore palm than shoot an underperforming load.
@@noahmercy-mann4323 shot placement is supreme for sure. I’m partial to the 110 gr ballistic cap hornadys. 38 spec +p of course. I haven’t found anything close to that for best self defense
Im really glad you did this video. I don't have a stubby mostly for the ammo being to slow. Obviously i was wrong. On your misfires with the 605. I would take the grips and make sure your strain screw is tight. Then check if it is the same chamber 😊
I used the 135gr Gold Dot and noticed that it doesn't penetrate that much with zero expansion. I have those also but don't use them. Critical defense is the most accurate round I've shot in my 640. I have Underwood 150gr Wadcutters labeled 1000fps from a 4" and around 900 in the 2" barrel. I think over-penetration may be a problem but I like them anyway because they won't under-penetrate. Underwood semi-wadcutter158 gr plus p is really hot and also may over-penetrate but I like those also because I know they will also penetrate. I wish they made them in a softer lead because hard cast lead does risk hitting someone behind what you are shooting. I can't seem to find any with a softer lead that doesn't over-penetrate and still meets the FBI testing protocol.
I used to load them 135's up a lot when hand loading. A light .357 Mag does well with them, but yeah in .38 Special they don't really expand in a snub. If I recall, I did test them in .357 Mag in a 2" and they expanded well but in a 4" barrel, the short barrel 135 gr .357 load actually over-expanded and blew the petals off. It's a very finicky bullet wanting about 1,000-1,100 FPS.
About the primer strikes. I have found out that if the primer isn't seated completely and bottomed out in the pocket you will get light strikes. The energy is lost on the first strike and usually that seats the primer deeper and it fire's on the second strike. Just my 2 cents.
I believe that your test of the Buffalo Bore LSWCHP 158 gr lead standard pressure actually performed better than the Hornady XTP 125gr +P. That is what I use in for my snub nose EDC.
XTP's can be decent but their expansion threshold is more 'critical' (no pun here). Handloading them in .38+P, I need like 930 FPS+ to get expansion. Issue is when Hornady themselves will load the American Gunner with the 125 XTP, the velocity in a snub is like 800 FPS and a 4" maybe 900 FPS.
Well..a long time ago,begining of the "90ies, I tested numerous 380,38 Spl,38 Spl +P, 357,9mm,45ACP in balistic gel, pigs,wild pigs...and conclusion came with a results. 380,38 Spl,38 Spl+P and big number of 9mm where simply too weak to achieve respectable and obvious results,so I could rely my life on it. 9mm winner at that time whose 124grs Sierra Power Jacket and 124grs Gold Dot loaded to 1250ft/s and from factory loads 124grs Hydra Shok. A bit anemic,but Hydra did 12 inch penetration and did certain level of expansion,but wit werry small damage in the wound chanell. 357 whose ( and I believe still is ) a category by it self. From Factory load, 125grs JHP from Remington,Federal,Winchester ..all did well. 140grs JHP great,and till today,concerning self defense without obstacles it do 15 inch penetration,100% expansion and a huge,nasty to see wound chanell. Still my choice for home defense load. 158grs only one load do it 100% as it should. Hydra Shok. Till today,in heavy weight I think it is the Best factiry load for outdoor,car,street situation (obstacles included ) . 45 ...that whose a disapointment in expansion part. In gel OK but ib live tisue...mostly low to no expansion. Best results whose with 185grs Golden Saber,185grs Sierra Power Jacket,185grs Gold Dot,200grs Gold Dot,but all loaded to 1100 ft/s. Hot. Heavy ones...only Hydra Shok had expansion. Today..my first choice for protection is 357 and hot 9. No place for something that doesn't work as it should. S&W 60 with 2" barrel,S&W 19 with 2,5" and 4" barrel,Sig 229,Sig 226,Glock 19,,Gov 911,Sig 220 where used ib those years. All the animals which where used for testing where eaten later.
Experience with black powder is what convinced me that there is no better effect on a flesh and blood target than PURE LEAD. Hard cast bullets are for practice. Easier to clean and all that. Shock effect is what will put a target down. The old timers used pure lead bullets and at maybe 700 to 950 FPS. they worked with decent hits. Up close at handgun ranges, the more powerful guns like 45 Colt, 41 Colt , 45 Schofield and 44 Russian or Special and 38-40 or 44-40 were what worked most of the time. Just remember that the 1860 Army and 45 round ball at 900 FPS laid out a hell of a lot of guys in the War Between the States. Gel tests are just for comparison. Remember that in Miami the FBI shootout was ended with a .38 FBI factory load, properly appplied.
Anyone have any comments on the Kimber K6s? I got to finally fondle one and it felt really good and balanced in my hand. I've been shooting S&W snubbies for many, many years, but no other makes. Thanks and Blessings Sam, great information!
Thanks. While I don't have Kimber experience and while I think S&W is the best revolver maker that exists, their J-Frames aren't that good. I would rather carry this cheap Taurus over a S&W J-Frame and it's why I carry my Ruger LCR. I gave my J-Frame to my girlfriend because she's not a shooter, just needed protection while walking. And that's what the J-Frame is best at, at being carried a lot and shot not a lot. While you can technically shoot them a lot, they just don't shoot great and their light frames that makes carry great make the shootability pretty poor. Plus I was never accurate with them.
@@GunSam I can attest to S&W revolver issues in recent times with a new in the box Model 43 22 LR that I could hardly open the cylinder. It made an immediate round trip and after a month or so, it was fixed to my satisfaction. Over the years, since about 1974, I have had very few issues with S&W revolvers, and I did carry them on and off duty until transitioning to S&W 9mm semi auto's. I did have a terrible shooting 6 inch Model 14 (K-38) somewhere around 78 or 79. S&W, as well as Colt went through some periods of terrible quality control issues. Nothing against Ruger, I was never drawn to them, but I do enjoy shooting the old Vaquero revolvers, and I wish I hadn't traded my Bisley .44. I just remembered that I had a Charter Arms Bulldog .44 Spl that I had the barrel cut and crowned and bobbed and checkered the hammer and polished the trigger and I carried that a lot. Sadly, that one too has been gone for a long time now. I do love revolvers, but in today's world of threats, I rely upon having way more resistance available than back in my revolver days. Thanks Sam!
I have a Ruger GP100 with a 2.5 inch barrel, a Ruger SP101 2 inch barrel, a Kimber K6S with a 3 inch barrel. I had a Colt King Cobra but sold it because the the trigger reset was too long, if I tried to shoot it fast the trigger wouldn't reset sometimes. As much as I like the Ruger's I think the Kimber has a nicer trigger and it is more refined in fit and finish. It also has a wood grip that I thought would make it less comfortable but that isn't the case. If I had to keep only one it would be the Kimber.
@@markmcdonald5711 thank you! After holding and dry firing the 3 inch K6s, i thought that for me, it just feels better than the new Colt Python. The S&W's and the Ruger's feel okay, but again, for me, the Kimber feels the best. I'd sure like to shoot one before dropping $1,000 or more because I'm also aching to have a Springfield M1A Scout Squad, and it's going to require more dough from the bakery. Thanks again Mark!
In my revolvers I run heavy grain hard cast ammo. I prefer not to use +P because I value rapid follow up accuracy over that tiny bit of increased velocity. IMO the heavier weight hard round will penetrate better in all circumstances. Because JHP ammo is so velocity and barrier dependent. Your JHP ammo might work fine against a threat wearing a Tshirt but fail to expand against a heavy coat. Also, the velocities are typically listed off of 4" barrels and mine are all 2" barrels. I do the same thing with my Glock 42 ammo. I run heavy hard cast standard velocity rounds rather than HP ammo. I might be off in my thinking though. Feel free to correct me if I'm wrong. The Internet is good for that if nothing else.
Great job Sam,as usual.I have been around the block a bit.Your vids are always well done.Generally I like to carry 44 Spec.357 mag,45 acp, 40 S &W.I don't like 9mm have bad luck With them.They have been recommend to me.I have light S&W637 38 spec use 110 Hornady CD.Underwood 150 wadcutter good.In my 44 spc.Bulldog 200 gr.Under wood Wadcutter Very stiff recoil in my injured hand.I am going back to heavier guns. There have been a few problems even with heavier Caliber's.In my recent Ccw class my instructor informed our class of ammo malfunctions across all brands sans Buffalo bore,Underwood not shot in class.These guys are running 30 students per class 2x per week. There was issues in my class.Unfortunately.Good luck all.
Hey Gun Sam, just a quick question. If your .38 snub will only shoot standard pressure, what's the best ammo to run? Right now, I'm using Remington wheelgun lead semi wadcutters. I see here, both ammos are plus P. Your thoughts. Thanks and take care.
Saw pretty good things from underwood item 733 158 grain fbi load +p with hi-tek coating. Just got my box in the mail and ordered some hi-tek wadcutters
I too, have "artsy" hands and I feel your pain! I've gone to non plus p .38 rounds, like some of the slightly warmer wadcutters offered by Buffalo Bore, Lost River and Underwood in light weight snubbies. I back them up with the best standard velocity hollow point I can get my hands on. I save the plus p stuff for my steel framed snubbies. Best of luck! PS - try some Hempvana! 👍
@GunSam thank you for your amazing tests! I have watched your vids for years and based on your snub results they influence the choices I make for my EDC ammo. Years ago you were impressed with the Federal 129 grain hydrashok. Then you also seemed to like the Winchester PDX1. Now through your tests you landed on the CD 110 grain+P. Do the light primer strikes of the ammo make you worried to continue to carry it? I could see in your face that you seemed surprised. Like you I don’t feel it was a Taurus issue but a bad quality control of ammo issue. Btw, I just bought 2 more boxes of the CD+P 👍🏽
I carry the Hornady 110 non +P. (When I carry my 642) Never encountered that issue, but the boxes I have are a year or two old. I wonder since demand is so high, quality control is the problem. This is very concerning. Good info and good testing. Thanks.
YOUR reviews are Excellent, Kudos to you.....Question, what is the trigger pull on the weapon you are using and have you done trigger action work on it, (Taurus 605, 357 2" barrel) ???...Thank you....
My $.02: If I had the 110 CD, I'd use it in my 4 inch Security Six. I'd carry the 125 Gold Dot in my 2 inch 856UL or 2.5 inch Charter. My Gold Dots are the 135+p. The box does NOT say short barrel. 357 Magnum is bad ass for a reason, and I do have 125 CD for the Six, the Charter, and my 3 inch 692. I haven't put a magnum through the Charter yet. I'm holding out hope t hat Federal will produce the HST in 38 again.
I just purchased a Taurus 856 38 special snubnose. I also went with the Hornady Critical Defense 110 grain FTX standard pressure. The +P version was tempting, but Taurus doesn't recommend the +P for long term use as it could shorten the life of the revolver.
Great video. This subject is always loaded with controversy. I load for practice/training but I like to carry factory ammo for any carry situation. I've chosen Critical Duty in 9mm & .40ca. I wonder if Critical Duty would work well in the .38 as well?
Thanks. There is no Critical Duty in .38 Special or .38 Special+P. Now I can say that the Hydrashok Deep .38 Special+P is a decent load that is made in the same way that the Critical Duty is made, hard alloy and thick banded jacket etc. I tested them yesterday and they did very well. I just haven't released the video yet.
I don't see much difference in use case for LE vs the rest of us. Bad guys routinely operate out of cars and take cover regardless of what type of victim is shooting back. I saw your 135+P GD test where it failed to expand in plain gel. I've also seen others where it expanded reliably. IIRC that round was developed specifically for use in a 1-7/8" J frame for a large department. Thinner jacket with a larger cavity were some of the features. I'm guessing the BB or Underwood could coax another 50-100fps out of that 135 and that would likely be ideal. Both GDs would likely work well out of a 4". Thank you for all the great presentations!
Always enjoy your vids. If you can test the Lehigh 140 grain defender at about 1000 fps from your Taurus in the future, that would be great. I think you have tested the lighter version before iirc. I carry a 605 black oxide with handloads - that bullet at 1000 fps. My 605 shoots right to point of aim at 25 yards with most loads. I really like it.
They seem to not overpenetrate, but as far as how well they would do in the real world is yet to be seen. My main concern is that when you put a hollowpoint through a hard barrier, they can often still do well due to bullet weight and mushroom/mangling causing a nasty bullet to hit the target after a barrier. I am not convinced that the Xtreme bullet through let's say a windshield shooting outward would do that well because you lose half your velocity and you would also mangle the flutes before it hits a target. But I cannot confirm any of this until I test them.
After about the 4th, 5th, 6th comment that is the same comment of "Your gun is junk, not the ammo with the light primer strike", I feel the need to respond. And my response is this - While I don't think Taurus is the best gun out there, I have owned this revolver and been shooting it regularly since 2019 and I do not recall ever having a misfire in it up until this video. After I filmed this video a couple weeks ago I been shooting it more I also have not had a misfire in it.
And why would I? I keep getting comments about strain screws and the like....IT'S A TAURUS SMALL FRAME, it doesn't use a strain screw. It is coil spring to hammer to transfer bar to firing pin. It's a very reliable revolver. Just stop embarrassing yourselves with the "it's your gun" comments because it makes you look stupid. There's nothing mechanically there that could cause a light strike and even if this were somehow the cause, the gun not firing just two Hornady rounds with zero issues with the Gold Dot would be a statistical unlikelihood.
I suspect you hit an extremely unlikely case where the primers were not completely seated. The first strike finished seating them and the second detonated them. This is of course strictly wild guessing. It is my understanding that ammunition manufacturers are running 24x7 to keep up with demand. Primers are the most sensitive component for error. And the hardest to get. Given the random nature of such things, you may not have this happen again for a hundred years. Or it could happen tomorrow. And you might not be able to tell by eye ahead of time if the primer is fully seated as the tolerances are in thousandths of an inch, as you know.
What makes matters worse is that I think I did fire them after the fact in single action as where the duds were in double action. There's just that tiny bit more hammer travel and force in single action. It's possible that the average UA-camr would have never had an issue (cock gun every shot, shoot, break grip cock with strong hand lol). I would bet that single action could finish seating them and set them off at the same time.
@@GunSam I can't discount that as a possible reason why the rounds fired on re-strike. Given that the S&W 642/442 are DAO, just pulling the trigger again would have been your only option. And I suspect that among J-Frame size revolvers, those Airlights are about as popular as snub nose 38s get. The same principle would apply. A highly stressed shooter might cycle through a bit before realizing it's time to do a reload.
IIRC, Bernhard Goetz fired at least four shots before getting out of Dodge (NYC). It's kind of difficult to say things came out in his favor. But he did survive.
@Fudmottin Taking time out to salute Mr Goetz. "You don't look so bad, here's another..."
@@randyduncan795 That was not my point.
If you want a point, NYC does not recognize your right to self defense.
I like this guy. Keeping it real and simple. No BS. Right up front. Very believable. 👍
Gunsam and Paul Harrell are my two favorite UA-camrs and more or less, the only reason I am on here anymore.
@@scottphipps3577 both legit! sniff around Scott. There’s other very good content, but be prepared to do some filtering. 🍻✌️
I get the feeling he is a independant thinking no agenda no bs guy honest and upright, the world needs more people like this! 👍
@@scottphipps3577God Bless Paul Harrell
Yea for sure
Of the two I would take the Gold dot. In a lot of the testing I've seen the plastic tip rounds seem pretty fickle. But honestly my inclination is to stick with lead WC or SWC rounds. You get reliable penetration and the flat meplat gives good damage without having to depend on expansion.
my thought exactly.
Agree
I currently own a NIB S&W J frame Bodyguard .38spl . In short, I'd say the Speer Gold Dot 135gr +P JHP. This ammunition was R&Ded with the NYPD. 2000s. I also like the 110gr +P DPX, Critical Defense 110gr. Older frangible. 38 rounds like Magsafe SWAT or Glaser Silver slugs are + but they cost a lot. I carry Golden Saber 125gr +P. I could not see any 135gr Gold Dot.
A flat nose lead bullet tends to create a large permanent wound cavity upon entry. The shock factor, often ends the fight quickly, rather than depending on hitting a vital organ. That is part of the reasoning behind the .45acp round. The idea of making someone absolutely not want to get shot twice.
the 135gr Speer Gold Dot load you briefly mentioned was designed to work properly from snub nose revolvers, hence it is labeled amongst their short barrel family of offerings; NYPD asked Speer for this load to use in their issued & spproved list of snub nosed revolvers prior to switching to 9mm semiautos exclusively
That's the load my wife and I use. Water jug and meat target show it to be 100% reliable at penetration and expansion from 2 different snubbies
Unfortunately, the gold dot short barrel round is currently impossible to find, even online.
Best defense concept ever: breaking contact.
Something important to remember about ballistic gel: it is not intended to replicate human tissue. It provides a repeatable, consistent medium to scientifically gauge bullet expansion and performance. Bullets which consistently penetrate between 12”-18” *and* expand at least nearly double its original size *tend* to provide reliable results in stopping people.
gel is made to replicate the same resistance, what happens to a bullet. If gel was not intended to replicate flesh, no one would use it. It's not a 1:1 penetration, but it does indeed replicate flesh.
My grandfather carried the Winchester 158 lswc hp +p as his duty load. Cor-bon or Buffalo bore make good versions. I personally carry the Buffalo Bore version in my M10 Smith.
Was it a Heay barrel S&W M10?
Underwood has some good ones similar to the Buffalo Bore also.
@@johnfeliciano585 mine is a heavy barrel M10-14, my grandfather carried a M15-2 combat masterpiece.
Yeah great rounds but in a ultra light snubbie they are pretty snappy to shoot.
From Mike
I've been watching your channel for a while now.
I appreciate your consistency in testing at your range. Velocities. Accuracy. Gel tests with and without ply. I know you're helping alot of fans to make responsible and practical decisions about what to expect or not from firearms available today. Good work. Thanks...
Thank you for all of your testing.
Love this channel. Either one of these rounds is fine, as is the swchp, as is a full wadcutter. Pick what you like. Shot placement rules above all and always will. Pick a decent round and hit them right. Same goes for hunting rounds. No need to split hairs to this degree IMO!
Filmed 7-1-23
Many have derided a .38 for being inadequate but that runs contrary to my OIS experience on the street. The round you’re featuring is what I carry in my 340PD b/c it’s easy to handle in a 12 ounce J Frame. Thx for another instructive presentation Sam.
38 is not inadequate especially in home defense scenarios/ distances. It’s a self defense round not a fighting gun round
No one’s coming in your home, getting shot then shrugging it off saying oh it was only a 38 special
Any .38 Special load to the skull will work. But yeah, Critical Defense is pretty darn reliable in a torso.
Nope.
@@robwilson3749feel free to elaborate.
I am interested in the +p critical defense of the idea of the polymer keeping it from getting clogged with clothing. but I've seen 9mm critical defense working as an fmj
Thanks for your post, Sam. Speer Gold Dot and Hornady Critical Defense can be depended on to get you through a difficult situation.
The solid copper Barnes bullet in Buffalo Bore even in standard pressure does great. Good penetration and great expansion.
It would be nice to see a video on the Winchester pdx1 130 grain 38 special plus p! Great informative video! Thank you.
Gun Sam is GREAT and just as consistent, informative, and reliable as the best ammo he's even tested. I kind of miss the baloney though.
I still loved the results of the +p buffalo bores and I'm not sure I want to change ammo at this time. I do have some XTP rounds in box too. They were accurate as hell! But I want more power I think. I feel that under stress I won't notice much difference at shorter distances and I want to leave the biggest OUCH I can from my taurus 856
My choice is Hornady Critical Defense in my Charter Arms Undercover .38 spl 2 inch snub nose revolver.
Every time i watch a video of a round vs another round they always produce difference results. Damn!
As a scientist I feel the need to express that the majority of UA-cam tests aren’t truly scientific. Most are anecdotal at best. Firing 4 or 5 rounds isn’t enough to get a valid result. Go ahead and flip a coin 5 times and see, you might end up with 4 tails and one heads meaning heads up only happens 20% of the time. We know that’s not the odds but only if we flip it a hundred or more times. Gun Sam is great and I really enjoy his demonstrations, but if you’re going to trust your life on something testing a few hundred examples would be more reliable.
Remington 125 grain scalloped jacket hollow point because I can't give up on the past.
I ran one through a windshield and was surprised at how well it did. Basic standard pressure 110 gr one. It's in an upcoming video.
But what about a 3" snub barrel? Many like the 158 grain semi-wadcutter which does damage without expansion.
I try to shoot down Hill or take a running Start so it's 900ft per second. Plus my moving forward so its 900 ft per second plus my 9 Miles a hour makes a difference
If you just start with the muzzle at the sky and whip your arms down as fast as possible depressing the trigger once the muzzle is level, you will add even more velocity.
Good info! I appreciate how you give context for interpreting stats and performance expectations.
Thanks! I appreciate your videos. Surprising issues with the Hornady.
Your test of Buffalo Bore FBI load equivalents show they are also good candidates for best defense load.
Great video. What's got me really interested in light and fast vs slow and heavy is Mr GunsNGear posted a disturbing video on twitter. A very large man assaulted a much smaller person. He had the guy against a car with the door open, effectively pinning him. So he slammed the little guy who then went to draw from an appendix style holster. The big guy tried to crush the little guy with the door, but the little guy managed to get shots off and break contact. Depending on camera angle, he either fired five or seven rounds. I don't know what he had. But he prevailed. As you can imagine, when you have only five, you want them to work. I think some of the shots were superfluous, but that's a tough call.
My take away from that particular incident was that you need each round to be doing real damage to force a break in contact. The big guy was more than large enough to kill the little guy bare handed.
I'm no street fighter. If I can't avoid the situation, I really need the "get off me" power. And I want it to work sooner rather than later.
Thanks. Yeah I opened that thing you sent. Looked like probably a 9mm or whatever.
Here and there you here of those exceptions. There is also a story about a cop who had a gun fight with someone which he hit 5 times with 45 ACP and he was still shooting back. He even hit vital organs. That last shot that took him down was actually a head shot.
@@nicholasroberts9618 Its not the caliber! I have read from a leo that he did know another cop who was killed in a gun fight. He had a 4 inch revolver and fired all his 6 shots into the chest at close range but the thug was still able to shot back and run away. Sometimes I think firearms are a bit overrated.
@@nicholasroberts9618 It was .357 Mag. The 45 ACP story is well documented search for "Sergeant Timothy Gramins" You also can find some interviews about stopping power with old reputable cops. I also can remeber another one where somebody was hit in the chest by a 44 Mag still able to run away but collapsed afte 1-2 miles but also survived. There are some statistics that show that there are no significant differences in one shot stops from handgun calibers from 380 acp up to 357 mag. Al I say was that there isnt a magical caliber you can rely on. And you actually confirmed that. ( those rounds were stopped by a Carhart Duck Quill work jacket. I dont belive you. This is BS²)
@@nicholasroberts9618 Now you talk about bullet design not caliber! And obviously bullet design can make a difference.
I also think for normal self defense frontal hits 9-10 inches are still enough and with this expansion even better. But the Federal HST Micro expands even more (0.7) and has also good penetration.
Yes but I read and saw on the HST website that those have been discontinued.
@@johnochicago8457 If you go on federals hp and look under Premium Personal Defense they are still listed.
Excellent video testing, Thank you Sir!
I picked up a 340pd last week and have been rewatching your old .38 special videos ever since.
While I would like to use .357 in those titanium cylinders to avoid having to clean up carbon rings, I don’t see why.
I’m between the hornady critical defense +p and underwood’s 125gr xtp .38spl +p.
Both are accurate from the 340,but those underwood’s definitely stand out.
Keep up the great content.
Try Buffalo Bore 158 gr. +P Semi wadcutter hollow cavity item number 20/20A.
They didn’t survive 2 shots before they jumped crimp out of that 12 oz revolver.
@@grzebyk05abletry the underwood 150gr standard pressure hardcast wadcutter
My hand is beginning to hurt after reading your comment about the .357 Mag in the 11 oz 340PD...LOL.
I always trust personal experience over what an ad on the box says. Advertisements and companies have been known to lie in order to make their products more appealing. Hence why I love these extensive ammo tests.
I feel like the remington golden saber is often overlooked but a lot of the ballistics test I've seen show great results with the 125 gr +p
Many of the original Golden Saber bullets were pretty good. Though with the switch to bonded bullets, the results are less impressive lately.
In 2023, I load Remington GS 125gr +P .38spl in my snub M&P Bodyguard revolver. It has decent ballistics. Well made.
Good job Sam, I will stay with my hand loads for my 38 spl. 1 7/8" S&W mod 36 those would be a 148 gr BBWC with 3.6gr of Alliant Bullseye and a F100 primer.
I don't own a .38 Special only revolver and I always shoot .357 mag through my guns but I found this video informative as usual. Thanks!
When ballistic testing used pigs most standard bullet weights and velocities were established.
Modern Self Defense cartridges are based on Ballistic Gallatin.
Military ballistic requirements do not have a fear of an exit hole.
Police ballistic requirements require no exit hole do to legal reasons.
Civilian Self Defense requirements are Similar to LEO’s.
With all of these things to consider the low penetration and high number of hits seems to be a prudent Self Defense cartridge for urban scenarios where an exiting bullet cannot happen.
This is where a 38 and a 380 become perfect. Multiple hits are easy for most shooters with these calibers. So it might be a good test for you explore further.
I carry handloads. 38 Special +P 140 grain Lehigh defenders at 1000 fps. My revolver choice is the 605 as well.
Any idea how many rounds you have through your 605
Following. My Smith likes the 160 grain button nose I cast but it's too nice a gun to carry. (Old 19). Thinking of getting a TORO
Excellent synopsis at the beginning! (But regarding the bullet weights, Buffalo Bore and Underwood both load 158 grain rounds that expand magnificently from a snub-nose, they just have unmanageable recoil from a light carry gun--all of which our host knows as well as I do.)
Thanks
Thankyou for proving once again what an important resource you are to the shooting community! Your work is SO detailed and well researched, and SO well explained that everyone from beginners to experts benefit from it. Seriously, be proud of your art! (also you don't wave flags around to prove what a great Patriot you are, and you don't shout "YAOW'ALLLLL" every sentence).............................elsullo
Thanks. I am one of the few gun guys not from Tennessee and Kentucky lol. Another guy here in MI not far from me is "The Firearms Guy" "HEY THERE FRIENDS" lol
I like the The Firearms Guy’s videos.
Really like his “limp wrist test”.
When I saw him do that, I accused him of copying my normal shooting style, heh heh.
The guy who's accent you made fun of does some of the best ammo testing on YT. I like this channel quite a bit, great work with revolvers which is why I watch. But to dismiss the other guy because of his accent? JSMH.
Thanks for the intelligent data-driven comparison.
When the Federal HST load for micro revolvers came out, it was very reliable in ballistic gel from the snub nose length barrels.
The NYPD Speer Gold Dot load had a good reputation from officer involved shootings. My department issued Remington SWCHP 158 grain +P for the older veterans who carried a snub nosed for off duty or back up. The lead was softer and would expand compared to the same load offering from Federal or Winchester.
I never found the HST reliable in terms of performance. Tends to underpenetrate more than most rounds.
I tried hollow points in my j-frame and they didn’t work very well. The expansion isn’t consistent. Just for fun I loaded a 126 grain black talon in 38 special and I used the same bullet for my 357 mag. The38 special penetrated 10 inches but no expansion, the 357 with a 4 inch barrel penetrated 12 inches but the wound channel was huge. For my j-frame I use 158 grain soft cast wadcutters. They aren’t going fast but they do a lot of damage.
Hard to beat SW HP in soft or med soft lead for just about any revolver
Massad Ayoob among others, 1980s 1990s said the 158gr lead SWC HP +P was ✔️. I used the Buffalo Bore .38spl in the 2000s. I'm not crazy about lead, SWC lead bullets; hard to clean, lead-smoke.
@@DavidLLambertmobile common hard cast bevel base is just about the worst lead bullet . Matts Bullets is one place to get different hardness & flat base , the way it should be . Hard cast is best for high vel , but with the right size & flat or near flat base , they can be very good . The med hard lead is the best for most use , most don't offer it .
I get why Gun Sam uses Taurus. He’s explained it before. For these videos purposes, they’re fine. That said, if you’re going to get any revolver, get a Ruger or S&W if this is going to be your “save my ass” revolver. As for ammo in .38 in a snubbie, that’s a crap shoot. I like hard cast heavy for caliber wad flat nosed cutters OR, semi jacketed wad cutters also heavy for caliber. 158 grain. JHP I think undercuts penetration which is key but this means you also need to have more accurate hits in vitals with non hollow points. Just my opinion ion.
I carry with Critical Defense in all my revolvers and most of my Semi autos. They are a good round and I never have a problem with them. They are a well designed round .
Again very straightforward solid information, appreciate the directness in the comments.
Much appreciated!
What I have seen in various tests is the Critical Defense loads expand consistently. The polymer tip prevents clogging.
As always a great video. Gets right to the numbers and I appreciate you shooting a snub. Tired of watching guys test 4"+ barrels on protection ammo. I don't know anyone carrying a 5" .38 ...haha.
I get it with hi vel hp's with the expansion.
I load my 38's (or32's) with good old wadcutters. They'll punch a CLEAN HOLE through the target, paper or mammals...
Not a "stopper" but rather a major ventilator or plumbing leaker...and make the target think twice about the emergency room...sorry to the bad guys...😢
Over on a Ruger Forum the subject of bad primers and lower powder amounts tan advertised came up. I'll skip the powder. I have no way of knowing. The short story is that all of the factory loads had an occasional light strike or dud. As it happens yesterday at the range I had 2 light strikes from Federal HST. I've had in the past light strikes with a couple of others. I assumed it was limited to those brands. Then the reloaders jumped in stating that their old primers of all brands were fine but the new stuff had problems. It appears that demand exceeded quality control.
I consider snubbies as either belly guns or ohmygawd guns. Up close and personal and at least the double tap.
As usual I can't see any responses. Thanks for the video Mr. Sam.
Your personal gun has a lot to do with ammo selection if hitting to point of aim is an important consideration to you. My guns are all older and were regulated for 158 grain bullets so anything under about 140 hits too low for my preference. So, I stick with 148 wadcutters but, the Golden saber is a good round as is the Hornady mainly because its conical shape is less prone to hangups when reloading which is why I carry it for reloads since reloading is such a highly unlikely event, I put up with the POI/POA issue.
Thanks for your videos.
This is exactly what I’ve been looking for, thank you for your testing and straightforward presentation!
Edited to add: I’ve just subscribed.
GS. Good video. I appreciate your experience over the long haul when discussing these various ammos. Thanks for sharing and take care.
Thank you, take care.
Came back to watch again! I only do this with my most favorite channels.
Thanks. I tested this ammo again a week ago. ua-cam.com/video/xCMpAIIgN9Q/v-deo.html
I heard a rumor that Federal stopped making the 38 spc HST ammo. It's too bad because it was getting almost 3/4" expansion and 13-14" penetration.
I was getting roughly the penetration I got with these Critical Defense with about that 3/4" expansion. I have noticed for maybe a year that Federal has had them listed as discontinued. They were okay, but I think Federal could have done better. I would say the Punch is a bit better as it's more powerful, seems to be similar to the traditional HST.
👍Good vid for me as i own a snubbie 2in 357 rev. I always chose Hornandy or Liberty ammo. The price difference is worth your life. Can't understand people who invest in a 800$ pistol or rev and shoot shit ammo.Thks for the vid.✌🇺🇲🇺🇲
I haven't found a factory load for 2" or shorter barrels that I actually like. I run a 135 grain Gold Dot and Silhouette powder (flash suppressed and one of the best powders for +P). I get over 940 FPS average from a 1 7/8" Ruger LCR. Exceptional load; accurate and expansion and penetration are just about as good as you can get from a snubby (over .5" and 15-17" in clear gel/fabric).
Federal HST Micro ?
And it kills your hand and makes follow up shots difficult.
Srsly try that out of a 12oz scandium, friend.
@@bonsaw57 The LCR weighs 13.3 ounces, and I have no issue making fast and accurate follow up shots thanks to lots of practice (with lower-recoiling stuff) and good technique. These ARE punishing for sure, but I don't shoot them for fun, and I'd rather have a sore palm than shoot an underperforming load.
@@noahmercy-mann4323 shot placement is supreme for sure. I’m partial to the 110 gr ballistic cap hornadys. 38 spec +p of course. I haven’t found anything close to that for best self defense
Im really glad you did this video. I don't have a stubby mostly for the ammo being to slow. Obviously i was wrong.
On your misfires with the 605. I would take the grips and make sure your strain screw is tight. Then check if it is the same chamber 😊
It's the ammo. Haven't had issues with ammo before or after this test.
Plus if I recall, Taurus doesn't use strain screws because they are coil springs.
I used the 135gr Gold Dot and noticed that it doesn't penetrate that much with zero expansion. I have those also but don't use them. Critical defense is the most accurate round I've shot in my 640. I have Underwood 150gr Wadcutters labeled 1000fps from a 4" and around 900 in the 2" barrel. I think over-penetration may be a problem but I like them anyway because they won't under-penetrate. Underwood semi-wadcutter158 gr plus p is really hot and also may over-penetrate but I like those also because I know they will also penetrate. I wish they made them in a softer lead because hard cast lead does risk hitting someone behind what you are shooting. I can't seem to find any with a softer lead that doesn't over-penetrate and still meets the FBI testing protocol.
I used to load them 135's up a lot when hand loading. A light .357 Mag does well with them, but yeah in .38 Special they don't really expand in a snub. If I recall, I did test them in .357 Mag in a 2" and they expanded well but in a 4" barrel, the short barrel 135 gr .357 load actually over-expanded and blew the petals off. It's a very finicky bullet wanting about 1,000-1,100 FPS.
@@GunSam Thank you Sam, I think I'll try the Gold Dot in .357 mag. Not that much more recoil but definitely will get their attention.
Interesting results. Thank you for perspective and demonstration.
Over the years, testing ammo in water jugs Critical Defense has been the most consistent load I've seen across all calibers tested
About the primer strikes. I have found out that if the primer isn't seated completely and bottomed out in the pocket you will get light strikes. The energy is lost on the first strike and usually that seats the primer deeper and it fire's on the second strike. Just my 2 cents.
I like your revolver content & your consistent method
I believe that your test of the Buffalo Bore LSWCHP 158 gr lead standard pressure actually performed better than the Hornady XTP 125gr +P. That is what I use in for my snub nose EDC.
XTP's can be decent but their expansion threshold is more 'critical' (no pun here). Handloading them in .38+P, I need like 930 FPS+ to get expansion. Issue is when Hornady themselves will load the American Gunner with the 125 XTP, the velocity in a snub is like 800 FPS and a 4" maybe 900 FPS.
Good explaination of expansion. Useful.
Really nice test,I would like you try some cast bullets in the 38,and the 357,I think it would be interesting thanks good test
Well..a long time ago,begining of the "90ies, I tested numerous 380,38 Spl,38 Spl +P, 357,9mm,45ACP in balistic gel, pigs,wild pigs...and conclusion came with a results. 380,38 Spl,38 Spl+P and big number of 9mm where simply too weak to achieve respectable and obvious results,so I could rely my life on it. 9mm winner at that time whose 124grs Sierra Power Jacket and 124grs Gold Dot loaded to 1250ft/s and from factory loads 124grs Hydra Shok. A bit anemic,but Hydra did 12 inch penetration and did certain level of expansion,but wit werry small damage in the wound chanell.
357 whose ( and I believe still is ) a category by it self.
From Factory load, 125grs JHP from Remington,Federal,Winchester ..all did well. 140grs JHP great,and till today,concerning self defense without obstacles it do 15 inch penetration,100% expansion and a huge,nasty to see wound chanell. Still my choice for home defense load.
158grs only one load do it 100% as it should. Hydra Shok. Till today,in heavy weight I think it is the Best factiry load for outdoor,car,street situation (obstacles included ) .
45 ...that whose a disapointment in expansion part. In gel OK but ib live tisue...mostly low to no expansion.
Best results whose with 185grs Golden Saber,185grs Sierra Power Jacket,185grs Gold Dot,200grs Gold Dot,but all loaded to 1100 ft/s. Hot.
Heavy ones...only Hydra Shok had expansion.
Today..my first choice for protection is 357 and hot 9.
No place for something that doesn't work as it should.
S&W 60 with 2" barrel,S&W 19 with 2,5" and 4" barrel,Sig 229,Sig 226,Glock 19,,Gov 911,Sig 220 where used ib those years. All the animals which where used for testing where eaten later.
Thankyou - Excellent Presentation - I carry a charter Arms 38 cal I feel Safe
2 years ago ,6-8year old H critical defence+P 125gr.corked my mom's 38 special Taurus. Test thru chrono. Old rounds aren't always safe
I have really come to like your honest content. Keep it up!
fantastic video Sam
Thank you
Experience with black powder is what convinced me that there is no better effect on a flesh and blood target than PURE LEAD. Hard cast bullets are for practice. Easier to clean and all that. Shock effect is what will put a target down. The old timers used pure lead bullets and at maybe 700 to 950 FPS. they worked with decent hits. Up close at handgun ranges, the more powerful guns like 45 Colt, 41 Colt , 45 Schofield and 44 Russian or Special and 38-40 or 44-40 were what worked most of the time. Just remember that the 1860 Army and 45 round ball at 900 FPS laid out a hell of a lot of guys in the War Between the States. Gel tests are just for comparison. Remember that in Miami the FBI shootout was ended with a .38 FBI factory load, properly appplied.
Those are both my carry loads. In winter I prefer the Hornady. Both great loads.
Anyone have any comments on the Kimber K6s? I got to finally fondle one and it felt really good and balanced in my hand. I've been shooting S&W snubbies for many, many years, but no other makes. Thanks and Blessings Sam, great information!
Thanks. While I don't have Kimber experience and while I think S&W is the best revolver maker that exists, their J-Frames aren't that good. I would rather carry this cheap Taurus over a S&W J-Frame and it's why I carry my Ruger LCR. I gave my J-Frame to my girlfriend because she's not a shooter, just needed protection while walking. And that's what the J-Frame is best at, at being carried a lot and shot not a lot. While you can technically shoot them a lot, they just don't shoot great and their light frames that makes carry great make the shootability pretty poor. Plus I was never accurate with them.
@@GunSam I can attest to S&W revolver issues in recent times with a new in the box Model 43 22 LR that I could hardly open the cylinder. It made an immediate round trip and after a month or so, it was fixed to my satisfaction. Over the years, since about 1974, I have had very few issues with S&W revolvers, and I did carry them on and off duty until transitioning to S&W 9mm semi auto's. I did have a terrible shooting 6 inch Model 14 (K-38) somewhere around 78 or 79. S&W, as well as Colt went through some periods of terrible quality control issues. Nothing against Ruger, I was never drawn to them, but I do enjoy shooting the old Vaquero revolvers, and I wish I hadn't traded my Bisley .44. I just remembered that I had a Charter Arms Bulldog .44 Spl that I had the barrel cut and crowned and bobbed and checkered the hammer and polished the trigger and I carried that a lot. Sadly, that one too has been gone for a long time now. I do love revolvers, but in today's world of threats, I rely upon having way more resistance available than back in my revolver days. Thanks Sam!
I have a Ruger GP100 with a 2.5 inch barrel, a Ruger SP101 2 inch barrel, a Kimber K6S with a 3 inch barrel. I had a Colt King Cobra but sold it because the the trigger reset was too long, if I tried to shoot it fast the trigger wouldn't reset sometimes. As much as I like the Ruger's I think the Kimber has a nicer trigger and it is more refined in fit and finish. It also has a wood grip that I thought would make it less comfortable but that isn't the case. If I had to keep only one it would be the Kimber.
@@markmcdonald5711 thank you! After holding and dry firing the 3 inch K6s, i thought that for me, it just feels better than the new Colt Python. The S&W's and the Ruger's feel okay, but again, for me, the Kimber feels the best. I'd sure like to shoot one before dropping $1,000 or more because I'm also aching to have a Springfield M1A Scout Squad, and it's going to require more dough from the bakery. Thanks again Mark!
In my revolvers I run heavy grain hard cast ammo. I prefer not to use +P because I value rapid follow up accuracy over that tiny bit of increased velocity. IMO the heavier weight hard round will penetrate better in all circumstances. Because JHP ammo is so velocity and barrier dependent. Your JHP ammo might work fine against a threat wearing a Tshirt but fail to expand against a heavy coat. Also, the velocities are typically listed off of 4" barrels and mine are all 2" barrels. I do the same thing with my Glock 42 ammo. I run heavy hard cast standard velocity rounds rather than HP ammo. I might be off in my thinking though. Feel free to correct me if I'm wrong. The Internet is good for that if nothing else.
Well Difference makes the world go round, I will take the Gold Dot. Thanks Sam.
Hard cast wadcutters at 750 to 800 fps.
Your best .38spl test, if I remember, was the Buffalo Bore solid copper hp.
Great job Sam,as usual.I have been around the block a bit.Your vids are always well done.Generally I like to carry
44 Spec.357 mag,45 acp, 40 S &W.I don't like 9mm have bad luck With them.They have been recommend to me.I have
light S&W637 38 spec use
110 Hornady CD.Underwood
150 wadcutter good.In my 44 spc.Bulldog 200 gr.Under wood Wadcutter Very stiff recoil in my injured hand.I am
going back to heavier guns.
There have been a few problems even with heavier
Caliber's.In my recent Ccw class my instructor informed
our class of ammo malfunctions across all brands sans Buffalo bore,Underwood not shot in class.These guys are running
30 students per class 2x per week. There was issues in my class.Unfortunately.Good luck
all.
Hey Gun Sam, just a quick question. If your .38 snub will only shoot standard pressure, what's the best ammo to run? Right now, I'm using Remington wheelgun lead semi wadcutters. I see here, both ammos are plus P. Your thoughts. Thanks and take care.
I would probably use either 110 gr SJHP ammo, 148 gr wadcutters or LSWC-HP like Underwood standard pressure.
Thanks for the response Sam, much appreciated. Fine work as always, but I do miss the Jug Or Not box lol. Take care.
Saw pretty good things from underwood item 733 158 grain fbi load +p with hi-tek coating. Just got my box in the mail and ordered some hi-tek wadcutters
Would love to see this load tested against the Standard Pressure version. Arthritis in my hands has made recoil an issue for me.
ua-cam.com/video/jhttE19zBSY/v-deo.html
Try DMSO for your pain.
I too, have "artsy" hands and I feel your pain! I've gone to non plus p .38 rounds, like some of the slightly warmer wadcutters offered by Buffalo Bore, Lost River and Underwood in light weight snubbies. I back them up with the best standard velocity hollow point I can get my hands on. I save the plus p stuff for my steel framed snubbies. Best of luck! PS - try some Hempvana! 👍
Thank you for another interesting and informative video
@GunSam thank you for your amazing tests! I have watched your vids for years and based on your snub results they influence the choices I make for my EDC ammo. Years ago you were impressed with the Federal 129 grain hydrashok. Then you also seemed to like the Winchester PDX1. Now through your tests you landed on the CD 110 grain+P. Do the light primer strikes of the ammo make you worried to continue to carry it? I could see in your face that you seemed surprised. Like you I don’t feel it was a Taurus issue but a bad quality control of ammo issue. Btw, I just bought 2 more boxes of the CD+P 👍🏽
I carry the Hornady 110 non +P. (When I carry my 642) Never encountered that issue, but the boxes I have are a year or two old. I wonder since demand is so high, quality control is the problem. This is very concerning. Good info and good testing. Thanks.
38spl was a good round 60 years ago.
And while i still own and love my 38s, i cannot see me carrying one for self defense in modern times
Why is the round any lesser 60 years later? Humans are humans, 60 years ago, 600 years ago, or 6 days ago.
In my opinion, what you showed was to always test your carry loads and switch them out often.
YOUR reviews are Excellent, Kudos to you.....Question, what is the trigger pull on the weapon you are using and have you done trigger action work on it, (Taurus 605, 357 2" barrel) ???...Thank you....
My $.02: If I had the 110 CD, I'd use it in my 4 inch Security Six. I'd carry the 125 Gold Dot in my 2 inch 856UL or 2.5 inch Charter. My Gold Dots are the 135+p. The box does NOT say short barrel. 357 Magnum is bad ass for a reason, and I do have 125 CD for the Six, the Charter, and my 3 inch 692. I haven't put a magnum through the Charter yet. I'm holding out hope t hat Federal will produce the HST in 38 again.
I think the Critical Defense non +p might be the way to go here. The slower velocity should mean a bit less expansion and getting us closer to the 12”
That's what others have found. That's why I carry std pressure critical defense since my revolver isn't rated for +p
I just purchased a Taurus 856 38 special snubnose. I also went with the Hornady Critical Defense 110 grain FTX standard pressure. The +P version was tempting, but Taurus doesn't recommend the +P for long term use as it could shorten the life of the revolver.
Great video. This subject is always loaded with controversy. I load for practice/training but I like to carry factory ammo for any carry situation. I've chosen Critical Duty in 9mm & .40ca. I wonder if Critical Duty would work well in the .38 as well?
Thanks. There is no Critical Duty in .38 Special or .38 Special+P. Now I can say that the Hydrashok Deep .38 Special+P is a decent load that is made in the same way that the Critical Duty is made, hard alloy and thick banded jacket etc. I tested them yesterday and they did very well. I just haven't released the video yet.
I just stay away from hollow points. For us, we carry xtreme defenders from Underwood.
I don't see much difference in use case for LE vs the rest of us. Bad guys routinely operate out of cars and take cover regardless of what type of victim is shooting back. I saw your 135+P GD test where it failed to expand in plain gel. I've also seen others where it expanded reliably. IIRC that round was developed specifically for use in a 1-7/8" J frame for a large department. Thinner jacket with a larger cavity were some of the features. I'm guessing the BB or Underwood could coax another 50-100fps out of that 135 and that would likely be ideal. Both GDs would likely work well out of a 4". Thank you for all the great presentations!
Yeah, I once had a 342PD police trade in. Whoever owned it had written in the manual cover "135 gr Gold Dot".
Always enjoy your vids. If you can test the Lehigh 140 grain defender at about 1000 fps from your Taurus in the future, that would be great. I think you have tested the lighter version before iirc. I carry a 605 black oxide with handloads - that bullet at 1000 fps. My 605 shoots right to point of aim at 25 yards with most loads. I really like it.
110gr loads are my preference for a .38 Special snub as well. The Hornady CD load works, but I've been carrying the S&B XRG myself lately.
I like Underwood Extreme Defender. I want a wound channel and feel that The Underwood ammo is best for me.
They seem to not overpenetrate, but as far as how well they would do in the real world is yet to be seen. My main concern is that when you put a hollowpoint through a hard barrier, they can often still do well due to bullet weight and mushroom/mangling causing a nasty bullet to hit the target after a barrier. I am not convinced that the Xtreme bullet through let's say a windshield shooting outward would do that well because you lose half your velocity and you would also mangle the flutes before it hits a target. But I cannot confirm any of this until I test them.
@@GunSam That would be a good test.
Ive had brass dust from the primers gum out the cylinder timing.. so now i always bring a toothbrush to the range .
★ Thanks. Appreciate your work!
Great video Sir
Love you videos, u keep it normal and real
My wife carries Lehigh Extreme Defense in her 380acp carry. Ballistic test around 15 inches.