armoredman
New member
Find an old movie called Deadly Weapons, lots of car penetration tests, winshield and door, with a wide variety of firearms, and these are 70s era cars. Amazing how many made it through. The ending of the movie is a blast.
Years ago there was probably some truth to that....convinced me that the last thing I want is a bullet that expands so much it doesn't penetrate. Well... actually I didn't need any convincing of that, I've always believed that hollow point ammo has resulted in getting the shooters killed as often as the shoot-ees.
You're ok, it was a 4-door. LOL!Some car restorer is going to read this and want to kick my Butt.
How much firepower would it take to penetrate a 1/4" steel plate? I'm think'n there just ain't no handgun cartridge out there that'll do it.
How much firepower would it take to penetrate a 1/4" steel plate? I'm think'n there just ain't no handgun cartridge out there that'll do it.
Read up on the FBI testing protocol for ammunition. They test for exactly the kind of performance you're talking about. If a particular loading meets the FBI specifications then you can be reasonably certain that it will get through common obstacles and still penetrate 12" to 18".What bullet is gonna GET THERE through a car door or a car window? Assuming all else is equal, if one party is shooting hollow points and the other party is shooting ball ammo that will pentrate better, my guess is that whoever's bullets get through the obstacles with enough power left over to get to the vitals of their opponent is the person most likely to survive the battle, and I don't think that'll be the hollow points. But I'm open to being proved wrong. I'd just like to see some apples-to-apples tests.
The bullet path shooting into cars and shooting thru glass is unpredictable.
Test 3 of the protocol is specifically designed to duplicate shooting through a car door.Well the FBI protocol doesn't involve a car door...
Some of the results are available online. Here are a few links I found in a couple of minutes or so of searching.Does anyone have any results using the FBI protocol or know where to find them on the internet? Seems strange that they'd publish the protocol but not the results they obtained using them. I'd have thought that would be very useful information for all LE agencies.
Most ammo boxes I've seen don't even list the velocity. If you want that kind of information you need to go to the manufacturer's data either online or in a published catalog. OR if you can find it, to testing results from a third party.Most ammo boxes I've seen report the velocity, nothing more.
You're not going to find that out by looking on a box of ammunition. I can't recall ever seeing a box of ammunition that quoted penetration specs and certainly not one that listed FBI testing results or that claimed to meet FBI specs.I wouldn't bet that any particular ammo manufacturer met the FBI protocol standards unless they specifically claimed to.
Sheet steel typically won't cause a hollowpoint bullet to expand although it might cause it to deform somewhat. I wouldn't expect to be able to tell much about a design of a bullet based on the hole it punched through a piece (or pieces) of sheet steel.Re: the bullet through the truck story, I'm assuming the bullet was not a hollowpoint round since it was described as leaving a 45 cal. hole in the truck.