kzt wrote:Reports are that glazer safety slugs are not nearly as effective as you might expect. It’s really designed more for court houses, where you have hard surfaces everywhere to send ricochets everywhere. And it doesn’t ricochet.
Glasers not working as advertised is an understatement. they have had serious issues penetrating enough to do more than make superficial wounds in many cases. like I said above, a wound only a couple inches deep isn't going to incapacitate an attacker and that's what can happen with Glasers if heavy clothing is involved.
The whole concept behind them is to eliminate the danger of over penetration and doing damage behind the target. In a professional protection situation, that limits the danger to bystanders because it's not going through and through. In a civilian home defense situation, that limits the danger to others in other rooms of the home, since most interior walls are nothing more than studs and a couple pieces of sheet rock, behind the target.
Unfortunately, they succeeded all too well at limiting the penetration and there is a serious chance that you won't get enough penetration to do enough damage to the target you want to shoot. When it works as designed, it does massive internal damage and everything tends to stay inside the target. Unfortunately, there are a LOT of circumstances that occur that are less than optimal for it to give that sort of performance.