JoePfeiffer
Member
Armor-piercing Teflon-coated bullets. Black Talon bullets causing extra-harmful wound channels.
sent using CPIP (see RFC 1149)
sent using CPIP (see RFC 1149)
But, that's unfortunately, the way they do it.the one about Gangaham style had my laughing so hard i was in tears at the mere thought of someone doing that
Are we talking about the same time frame in our lives??
rc
Just expanding hollow points that were unfortunate to have a somewhat ominous sounding name. Their capabilities and supposed hazards were blown all out of proportion in the popular media, of course (I know, you're shocked) and the factory responded by restricting them for LEOs only - which only increased their reputation.What were Black Talon rounds anyway? Why were they singled out?
You forgot to add "...and spin him around twice!"I'm surprised that no one else has brought this one up. It's an oldie, "They all fall to hard ball," reference the .45 ACP round. Or another along the same vein, Hit a man in the thumb with a .45 round and it will knock him off his feet.
I've heard this one a lotThat there is something 'magical' about .22 LR that makes it more lethal than a centerfire round, i.e. 'it doesn't exit and bounces around in the head/chest' often followed up with that they know an E.R. doc/paramed/x-ray tech that can corroborate these 'facts'.
Hit a man in the thumb with a .45 round and it will knock him off his feet.
Black talon is still sold. It's the same bullet recoated and renamed. I can't remember the name of the ammunition right now to save my life.
Glocks aim themselves magically and hit everything you shoot them at.
SO you can hold them sideways over your head while going the Gangnam Style, and you will still hit everything within your field of fire if you shoot all 17 rounds.
rc
we see gunslingers loading all six chambers of their revolvers and then holstering them.
Grunt Medic TXARNG said:Just expanding hollow points that were unfortunate to have a somewhat ominous sounding name. Their capabilities and supposed hazards were blown all out of proportion in the popular media, of course (I know, you're shocked) and the factory responded by restricting them for LEOs only - which only increased their reputation.
That a gun, especially a "cheap" gun, can "just go off."