you reduce the main spring and the recoil is a B****.....So I'm over at a friend's house, she just bought a Kimber micro nine and the mainspring is brutal. Does anyone know is there a good softer or smoother mainspring option for the micro nine?
I have no experience particular to the micro-nine, but my experience with similar size guns is that they need that stout spring to operate with the shorter stroke.
GsT
That's one of the things about those 'micro' and super light weight pistols I dislike. The Kimbers are nice guns but particularly nasty in that regard.
For people with smaller hands and most females, I steer them to the S&W 442 for a defensive and/or concealed carry gun and have them shoot one of mine.
FWIW.....-Al
polish p64 is a mil surplus 9x18 makThat's one of the things about those 'micro' and super light weight pistols I dislike. The Kimbers are nice guns but particularly nasty in that regard.
For people with smaller hands and most females, I steer them to the S&W 442 for a defensive and/or concealed carry gun and have them shoot one of mine.
FWIW.....-Al
I've gone as light as 11# in a standard .45 (16-18# is typical) and while it changes the nature of the recoil, I don't think it really makes it worse. I have no experience particular to the micro-nine, but my experience with similar size guns is that they need that stout spring to operate with the shorter stroke.
In 1911 parlance the "mainspring" is the spring captured in the rear of the frame which drives the hammer. If that's what you meant, disregard my comment.
GsT
This is wonderful.... My Wife and I spent the weekend with friends and sharing these responses (and PM's) made our conversations much easier! She won't probably get rid of the Kimber (it's gorgeous) but will buy something easier to rack for her carry gun.
She is very happy.
ANY excuse to buy another gun.......((My wife is hinting that her Hellcat sometimes feels a little heavy cocking too...."maybe she needs to try one of them other ones....." ))
The days of inferior .380 ammo are over, the quality defensive stuff is every bit as effective as 9mm.
This is not looking to good for my .32ACP
Centerfire
Riiiiiiigggggghhhhht... And modern 9mm is just as good as .45 ACP and modern .45ACP is just as good as .44 Mag, and modern .44mag is just as good as... ... .50 BMG... ergo, modern .380 is as good as .50 BMG."
If you want to carry .380, that's a personal choice. But if you want to ***pretend*** that a smaller, slower, lighter round is just as good as a faster, more massive round, you're delusional. Period. You can pick .380 for convenience or carry-ability, but it is not, and never will be, equivalent to (even) a 9mm. It is inconceivable that a round with lesser energy, driving a lighter bullet, could beat out or equal a round with greater energy AND greater mass. That's more absurd than the folks that perennially think that 9mm is better than .45, even though reality slaps them in the face every few years.
GsT
Well the thing you need to do is, uh, educate yourself.
I tend to read American Handgunner and in particular the great articles by Masaad Ayoob who writes exclusively on law enforcement gun issues, after action gun reports, FBI tests, and on and on.
Multiple tests, many by the FBI on stopping power have reported on this, time and time again, so what I am is informed there old guy.
And although I own a .45 carry gun, because I am a big guy and shoot it well, the difference in stopping power between a 45 and 9 with proper defensive ammo is a lot closer than you’d imagine and between a380 and 9, much to my initial surprise are almost identical. So, true to fact, I have studied extensively on the subject rather than to put myself in foolish harm with a carry choice and you can pretend to be smart.
Hint… it is a pantload less about mass than ultimate terminal balistics. Lots of LE used to carry 45’s until it was realized, with regularity, they made nice clean holes through and through, those smaller, often better, slugs,expand dramatically and stop internally with full impact of energy absorption.