Maldorian wrote:Take a Five-Seven. Uses said Five Point Seven Milimeter Bullets from the Belgish P90 submashine Gun.
Should be a reason why this gun is forbidden for free sale even in Weapon Country nummer one, the United States. If I remember correct, the reason is, because the Five-Seven Ammo is Armor piercing, something Cops don´t like to see.
And you shouldn´t forget: What use has a big gun, if you knock yourself out with the recoil of the gun. Firepower isn´t erverything. You have to control that power or it is useless.
That be said, my personal opinion is, that .50 guns are useless, because your enemy with a small gun has killed you alredy 5 times before you can hit him. You couldn´t targeting good and fast with a heavy gun and the first shoot breakes your balance, so if you miss, your enemy has his chance to kill you.
It is like the most things in life: you need the balance between the extreme sides!
In case of weapons, the balance between firepower and handling.
The Five-Seven is available on the civilian market.
What's not available is the AP ammo that makes it effective. Without that ammo, it's a slightly supped up centerfire version of a .22mag. Lots of velocity but no bullet weight to maintain that momentum.
Velocity is only half the formula, weight is the other half. Heavy bullets shed their momentum more slowly than light ones, so light bullets have to go faster to make up for it. Heavy bullets don't have to be going as fast to do significant damage.
Case in point, the 'buffalo gun' rifle cartridges of the 1870's. Stupendously heavy bullets in comparison to modern rifle rounds. bullets weighing 400 or 500gr weren't unusual for the .45 and .50's. Ridiculously low velocities in comparison, too. Many were just barely supersonic at the muzzle. Shouldn't be effective or accurate at range? Right?
Yet they were used to drive the largest land animal on the continent to the verge of extinction in just a few short years and were used for the first 1000 yard matches.
An account of some testing of Buffalo gun rounds using state of the art, modern equipment.
http://powderburns.tripod.com/sharps.htmlAn account of the first Creedmoor match in 1874. Note the Irish were using
muzzleloaders.
http://longrangebpcr.com/TCFacts.htmAS for how fast once can shoot heavy guns and big bore rounds, might I suggest you watch Jerry Miculek's 12 shot world record run over on Youtube?
He's shooting an N Frame Smith and Wesson revolver (a Model 625 variant, to be precise) and shooting .45ACP. Nobody's ever called an N frame Smith anything but a big gun. Until they came out with the X frame for the .500 S&W a few years ago, it was the largest revolver that Smith and Wesson made.
As for bore diameter, I carry a .45 because they haven't came out with a .46 or .47 yet.