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A Very Effective .38 Snubbie Load

There's a saying among the firearms cognoscenti: "Friends don't let friends carry mouseguns." That is, manly men, real men, carry big guns in big calibers. I guess I have to confess to not being a manly man because there have been times I've been packing a handgun whose caliber designation did not start with the numeral four. And all my usual backup guns are smaller than that "4" start. Oh, there have been times when I've been packing heavy and had bigbores and lots of them on my person. But the whispered seductions of an airweight .38 snubbie are sometimes like those of The One Ring--impossible to ignore.

The author says he has seen bigger hollowpoints but few deeper.

But what do you feed the snubbie? The old 158-grain lead roundnose is great for practice but not much else. The FBI load (a swaged 158-grain SWC with a hollowpoint in it) was all the rage for quite some time, and for good reason. When it was current, it was the best there was.

But all .38 snubbies face the Procrustean bed of ballistics: One size doesn't fit all. Usually, to gain expansion you have to give up penetration. In some circles that's an acceptable tradeoff. Me, I'd rather not give up anything if I can keep it.


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Which is why I found the Cor-Bon DPX line so interesting. Using bullets made of copper, they have no lead (thus are "condor safe") but still expand. The idea behind the DPX line of ammunition is to offset the usual decrease in penetration by using a bullet that expands in a controlled manner but still penetrates. Thus the copper bullets lacking lead and the deep but narrow (relatively speaking) hollowpoint.

The bullets themselves are longer than usual, again due to the lack of lead. To make this 110-grain bullet out of copper and provide a hollow up front that expands (but is controlled in doing so) requires a bullet nearly as long as a 158-grain softpoint of the old style. Expansion is directly related to velocity; the more you have, the more you get.

Coming from Cor-Bon, you can expect lots of velocity. However, you aren't going to get all that velocity out of a snubbie, and what you get you'll pay for. I have found that in full-size guns you get exactly what Cor-Bon says you'll get. In 9mm and .45 pistols, I have sometimes found myself clocking Cor-Bon ammo at greater-than-posted velocities. But revolvers are another breed. The variances between barrel lengths, cylinder gaps, throat diameters and bore tightness and roughness can shove velocities all over the map.

Thus, I was not the least bit surprised to find that the listed 1,300 fps of the 110-grain DPX load appeared only when I shot the ammo in some of my full-size guns. In my ICORE S&W M-28, they turned up 1,260. In the six-inch M19 I actually got 1,311 fps. But in the various snubbies, a bit over 1,100 was the norm--which, out of a two-inch barrel, and an airweight frame at that, is impressive.

With any bullet design, if you have too much velocity you get a sudden decrease in penetration, as the energy goes to expansion, disintegration and loss of bullet integrity. The trick in using velocity to increase penetration is to design a bullet that is tougher to expand but not so tough that it won't expand.


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