Flechette
Member
- Joined
- Oct 7, 2011
- Messages
- 480
Over the last couple of hundred years pistol performance has increased by increasing the pressure of the cartridge. A typical .45 cartridge is over double the pressure of a black powder gun, and 9mm is 50% higher than the .45 ACP. This is one of the reasons that modern pistol bullets can be smaller yet more effective.
However, aside from some flirting with +P and +P+ pressure ammo no one seems to be designing pistol hardware to handle even higher pressures. Why? Wouldn't a 55 gr .22 caliber bullet flying at 3,000 fps out of a pistol be just as deadly as a 5.56 NATO out of a AR-15 platform?
We have newer alloys than we did 100 years ago. We should be able to make barrels that can hold higher pressures.
However, aside from some flirting with +P and +P+ pressure ammo no one seems to be designing pistol hardware to handle even higher pressures. Why? Wouldn't a 55 gr .22 caliber bullet flying at 3,000 fps out of a pistol be just as deadly as a 5.56 NATO out of a AR-15 platform?
We have newer alloys than we did 100 years ago. We should be able to make barrels that can hold higher pressures.