Posted by Sarge: I won't try to change your mind but I can tell you this- if I had to feed ten people with venison, with only 50 rounds of handgun ammo for an undetermined period of time, I would far rather those 50 rounds were .45 ACP instead of 9mm.
I've never heard
anyone recommend a 9MM Parabellum over a .45 ACP for hunting big game.
The Army had a choice between the .45 and the 9MM for cavalry use, where ability to disable the horse was of paramount consideration, and after testing both on steers, they eliminated the 9MM from consideration.
Elmer Keith hunted a lot of game with revolvers, and he recommended big bores.
I'm not sure what "weight" to put on the similarity of the body weights of deer and humans, but I will put a lot of weight on one big difference between hunting and self defense: in hunting, if the game keeps going for fifteen yards, or twenty five, or ninety, so be it; if an attacking criminal remains able to function for an equivalent amount of time, that can be a bad thing--very bad.
So--to stop the criminal effectively, you need (1) adequate (but not excessive) penetration, and (2) to hit something vital. Unless one wants to rely entirely on luck, the latter dictates putting multiple shots on target quickly, requiring that muzzle jump be slight and that capacity be adequate. Those requirements also come into play when there is a second or third attacker.
Given adequate penetration and a hit on something important, the bigger bullet is always somewhat better. However, it works to some extent against the second an subsequent shots and against capacity. Not only that, but because one load is more effective than another on large game does not mean that it will have any meaningful advantage at all in self defense.
I bought my .45 in June of last year after not having fired one for more than four decades. I made the decision for a number of reasons, but frankly, I had not done a lot of research, and legend, folklore, and commonly held misconceptions certainly influenced the choice.
Most of those have been objectively challenged if not debunked by people who have done a lot of testing. Most qualified sources seem to have concluded objectively that with proper loads there is little, if any, real advantage in the .45 over the 9MM in terms of terminal performance on humans. By the way, that came as a real shock to me, and for a long time I was not inclined to accept it. I am old.
The FBI dropped the 9MM after a well publicized shoot-out, but it was later determined that the criticisms of the cartridge were unfounded. The FBI and many police forces have gone from the 9MM to the .40 S&W. Some Federal agencies use the .357 SIG. However, it is important to realize that the duties of sworn officers impose some requirements on their tools that civilians do not have. Try shooting someone obliquely through plate glass and see how far your defense of justification gets you. A sworn officer, on the other hand, may well have to do that.
The old school in me dies hard, and while I now accept rather reluctantly that for shooting people (god forbid), one cannot objectively substantiate that the 9MM Parabellum is not adequate, I'm still not sure about the .380 ACP
even though Bill Hickock swore by something in the same power class. Patrick Sweeney's comment that the Army might well have adopted the .38 Super Automatic in lieu of the .45 had the new Super .38 been available at the time also raised my old eyebrows.
If I were to hunt game of any size with a handgun, I would go with .44 or maybe a .41. But--I remember a lot of people denigrating the even more powerful .30 WCF for deer hunting. And that brings up something else, mentioned, by the way, in the FBI report to which I referred previously: most knowledgeable people consider the handgun to be a last ditch defensive weapon. People who don't have probably been watching too much television. The rifle is simply a lot more effective.
Of course, you can't have a rifle with you all the time.