Still on the search for a favorite .357 loading but I am limited by what is commercially available, and waiting for some extra cash to bulk order buffalo bore or double tap.
So here is what I have now:
Speer 125 gr .38 +p gold dot
Speer 135 gr .357 magnum gold dot (for short barrel)
Blazer 158 gr .357 magnum hollowpoint
The gun they will be loaded in is a 6" Ruger GP100.
I had the .38+P 125 gr in there originally, but just put in the 135 gr .357 ammo that I picked up.
The hollowpoints look HUGE in the 135 gr, and I wonder if they will penetrate enough to matter.
Since I have a .45 auto I could also use, I want to maximize the effectiveness of the round while sticking with the revolver platform.
I know all with work with right placement, but which is going to have the best terminal ballistics?
Looking up data now, if anyone has gellatin, numbers, or personal experience, please share.
(May eventually just go all 125 gr Double-tap/Buffalo Bore, but this is what the store had on hand).
P.s. when one of the salesman started talking about how corbon's metal construction blah blah produced more hydrostatic shock I kind of tuned out. 357 is fast but from what I've read hydrostatic shock is a rifle thing, not a pistol thing. I just want penetration first and expansion next.
So here is what I have now:
Speer 125 gr .38 +p gold dot
Speer 135 gr .357 magnum gold dot (for short barrel)
Blazer 158 gr .357 magnum hollowpoint
The gun they will be loaded in is a 6" Ruger GP100.
I had the .38+P 125 gr in there originally, but just put in the 135 gr .357 ammo that I picked up.
The hollowpoints look HUGE in the 135 gr, and I wonder if they will penetrate enough to matter.
Since I have a .45 auto I could also use, I want to maximize the effectiveness of the round while sticking with the revolver platform.
I know all with work with right placement, but which is going to have the best terminal ballistics?
Looking up data now, if anyone has gellatin, numbers, or personal experience, please share.
(May eventually just go all 125 gr Double-tap/Buffalo Bore, but this is what the store had on hand).
P.s. when one of the salesman started talking about how corbon's metal construction blah blah produced more hydrostatic shock I kind of tuned out. 357 is fast but from what I've read hydrostatic shock is a rifle thing, not a pistol thing. I just want penetration first and expansion next.
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