this post was submitted on 17 Dec 2024
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They didn't teach you not to flag your barrel at the corners? Or you were using an M16 instead of an M4?
And at 10 meters you're going to get about a 5 inch spread on that birdshot. At 3 meters (a standard 10x10 foot room) you're looking at about 1.5 inch spread. At 1.5 inches it's absolutely going to say hello to the next room over. Granted, an honest to god slug is going to go through the next 5 rooms at least.
Pistols are nice but actually require more training because people hold them wrong, sight them wrong, and reset them wrong, whereas a rifle or shotgun is a lot more intuitive as long as your target is reasonably close.
The conclusion is obvious. The best home defense weapon is a claymore mine rigged to your front and back doors with a poorly executed wire that taps a battery. Hopefully it only does it when the door opens. No worries about neighbors or missing the bad guy.
Source - Combat Infantry Badge, circa 2003 and way too much time being told I couldn't do things I thought were perfectly reasonable.
Well obviously an ied hidden in a wall and hooked up to a unmarked lightswitch is the ideal means of home defense, but you need a gun in case there's a second wave of home invaders.
See now, that's just too much handy knowledge for me. I have just enough handyman knowledge to order a sign online that says, "Smile For The Flash!"
Yes, you are taught how to clear corners. The problem is, in a home with tight hallways that's hard to prevent while staying keeping an alert stance, without having another person to cover you. But hell, if you got a husband and wife team sweeping that would be bad ass.
And you're correct, birdshot will most likely go into the next room. But it won't go through multiple rooms and possibly into a close neighbor.
Agreed that's pistols take much more skill, but I stand by them as the best home defense weapon if you're able to train. A revolver specifically.
Anddddd you sold me on the claymore.
https://youtu.be/H6clay9pFaw
No that shit is going through multiple walls. Handguns will go probably through more.
If you want something not going through the walls, scream and yell....
https://youtu.be/j3BlRPtCj2E
Even better video, walls are doubled up and has distance. You're shit is going through all kinds of walls.
For anyone showing up later without gun knowledge to see why the first test is fatally flawed... Bird shot loses its penetrative properties as it spreads. This has to do with multiple rounds impacting an area of material. Seeing this replicated in the second video would have been very helpful but the content creators dismiss it because it's pretty well known birdshot isn't going through walls the same way and they wanted a funny video. (At one point they fire an M1 Garand at their walls)
What a lot of people miss about self defense is that you should also be into reloading. (It makes practice so much cheaper too) If you can reload your own rounds you can find the lowest load of powder that will cycle the bolt on your weapon. Less powder equals less penetration, but seeing as a 22 LR is lethal at home defense ranges (that comically tiny bullet that kids shoot) it will work. And you've got to practice anyways.
A 9 mil will go though more walls than a slug? I disagree with that.
Watch the damn videos....no where did I say a 9mm will go through more walls than a slug... I stated that birdshot at 10 feet is basically a slug. It has not even left it's sabot at that distance.
Then I must have misunderstood this.
I did watch the video. And no, it's not basically a slug. That's such a silly thing to say. A slug and birdshot behave very differently and would cause very different kinds of damage. Also a slug is going to go through a person at close range, birdshot won't. That word "basically" is doing a lot of heavy lifting.
Also at 10 feet most birdshot will have a 2 inch spread. A slug isn't having a 2 inch spread, because yes, it does have time to disburse within 10 feet.