Salmonchaser
WKR
Actually Kevin two separate effects. What H and I were talking about as the case is extracted it draws blood etc into the barrel just like a syringe.
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I never saw the syringe thing in real life, sleeping on it I recall an old instructor from Seattle pd tell us if we saw it, it ain’t suicide.Salmonchaser, I like your thinking and experience on this topic. I understand your perspective on the syringe effect. For that to actually happen (blood drawn or pulled into the barrel and action) there would need to be negative pressure at the muzzle. Shell ejection is of course caused by explosive gas energy operating the bolt. I'm having trouble understanding how there could be negative muzzle pressure at that time. In any event, I would say most guys wouldn't rule a gun in or out based on how it performs in a muzzle-against-bear shot...given the extreme unlikeliness of ever having the need for it.
I always think these discussions end up being a wash, with each firearm type having pluses and minuses. One is not clearly better than another in all respects. Some will prefer more capacity while some prefer more energy per round. Each can argue for or against reliability. Each gun can be quite accurate. I have yet to hear or see documentation of either weapon jamming or failing in a true bear attack defensive shooting. Theory perhaps. Reality not so much?
I can speak from experience when I say that any handgun feels woefully insufficient when a 500+ pound grizzly is lurking nearby.
Nice thing with a revolver: If you experience a misfire or dead round, another pull of the trigger has you in action again.
Unless a bullet has jumped it’s crimp then your revolver is 100% out of service. With an auto you could just rack it again.
Kevin are you using the Buffalo Bore 255 grain?
I tried it in my 4” S&W 69 and the recoil is enough that I dont shoot it well.