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streamlight’s TLR-1s and TLR-2s strobe-equipped versions of its gun-mount lights feature C4 LED technology, and the TLR-2s also comes with an integrated laser sight.
Both are made of aircraft aluminum with a black anodized main body finish, while the housing for the TLR-2s’ laser is high-impact polymer.
The TLR-1s and TLR-2s mount directly to handguns with Glock-style rails and to all Picatinny rails.
Price $199 (TLR-1s), $488 (TLR-2s). Contact Streamlight, 800/523-7488.
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Streamlight’s TLR-1s and TLR-2s strobe-equipped versions of its gun-mount lights feature C4 LED technology, and the TLR-2s also comes with an integrated laser sight.
Both are made of aircraft aluminum with a black anodized main body finish, while the housing for the TLR-2s’ laser is high-impact polymer.
The TLR-1s and TLR-2s mount directly to handguns with Glock-style rails and to all Picatinny rails.
Price $199 (TLR-1s), $488 (TLR-2s). Contact Streamlight, 800/523-7488.
the .357 SIG was jointly developed in 1994 by SIG Arms and Federal Cartridge with one purpose in mind to provide the ballistics of a 125-grain JHP out of a .357 Magnum revolver, but from an auto.
At first glance this would seem improbable, but consider that the .357 revolvers carried by most police officers and armed citizens have (at most) four-inch barrels. Viewed in this context, the .357 SIG achieves its goal quite admirably. Numerous .357 SIG factory and handloads regularly produce velocities in excess of 1,350 fps, and many law enforcement agencies around the nation issue pistols chambered for it. The .357 SIG is a versatile cartridge in every respect that can fill a duty or personal-defense role, as well as provide loads of practical plinking fun.
The design is essentially a necked-down .40 S&W, but reloaders should not try to make cases out of the larger round. Cases so made will wind up about .02 inch too short, and the .357 SIG headspaces on the case mouth, just like most other auto cartridges, not on the shoulder of the bottlenecked case, as one might expect. Besides, there are a multitude of new and fired cases available for reloading. I used once-fired Starline brass for my test loads. Another big advantage of the .357 SIG is that it slithers into the chamber so easily. In fact, my .357 SIG pistols will chamber a fired case from the magazine every time.
Handloading is a snap. Yes, the cases have to be lubricated, but this is no problem. Just lay out a big batch of cleaned cases on a towel and give them a very light shot of Hornady One Shot Lube Spray or Midway Minute Lube. Roll them over with the palm of your hand, and give them another light shot of lube. Let the cases dry, and you’re ready to load. If you feel especially industrious, you can wipe off the lube, but I seldom do and everything functions to perfection.
The modest case capacity calls for standard primers. I used Winchester WSP primers for all loads. Medium-burning-rate pistol powders such as AA-7, Longshot, Blue Dot and Vihtavuori N-350 are good overall choices, and a wide variety of jacketed bullets from 90 to 147 grains of various constructions are available.
Our test gun was the superb Springfield Armory XD-357. Its 3.9-inch barrel has digested many thousands of handloads without a whimper or malfunction. (Virtually all loads grouped into two inches, some considerably less.)
I used a set of Redding dies to prepare all loads. This is a three-die set. The expander imparts a slight bell to ease bullet seating, and the seater die applies a nice, firm taper crimp to the case neck. And, of course, the shellholder for the .40 S&S is the correct one for the .357 SIG, too. (Useful trivia: This shellholder is also correct for the .224 Weatherby Magnum.)
Despite the “.357” in its name, the SIG cartridge is a true 9mm and uses .355-inch jacketed bullets. Some 9mm JHPs are a bit too long for the SIG’s stubby case neck, however.
Speer makes the 125-grain Gold Dot hollowpoint and TMJ FN bullets. Barnes produces the 125-grain XPB specially for the cartridge. Nevertheless, I tested several representative 9mm bullets from Sierra and Hornady, and these functioned perfectly and gave great accuracy and velocities.
The correct cartridge overall length (COL) for the .357 SIG is nominally 1.135 inches, and the test loads shown here are basically that. The industry maximum average pressure for the .357 SIG is 40,000 psi. The loads shown here exemplify the most practical ones. They were not designed to deliver the absolute top velocities, but they were exceptionally accurate and delivered uniform ballistics.
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As shotshells continue to gain recognition as a highly effective choice for home and personal defense, Winchester has moved to develop an entirely new category of shotshell loads, designed to combine the best qualities of what were previously two separate types of shotgun ammunition.
Joining the company’s Supreme Elite family of PDX1 Personal Defense ammunition for 2010 are the .410-bore PDX1-410 and the 12-gauge PDX1-12, each of which integrate the payloads of a shotshell and a slug load into a single shell.
The new PDX1-410 in particular is unlike any shotgun load ever marketed. It was designed specifically for use in the Taurus Judge family of .410/.45 Colt revolvers, which have forever changed the perception of the effectiveness of the .410 shotshell as an appropriate defense load in a concealment-size rifled-barrel handgun.
Before the PDX1-410, Judge users were limited to preexisting “hunting loads,” which are of three basic types birdshot, buckshot and slug. Of the three, buckshot loads have been generally deemed the most effective, but they are limited in terms of pattern spread compared to birdshot, and they give up penetration when compared to a slug. The PDX1-410 puts all three capabilities into one load, featuring a distinctive black hull and black-oxide high-base head.
The 2½-inch payload combines three plated “Defense Disc” projectiles and 12 pellets of plated BB shot (the three-inch PDX1-410 experimental version contains four discs). The combination of stacked-in-line Defense Discs functions as “mini slugs,” and the following dozen BB shot bridge the gap between birdshot and buckshot in terms of pattern spread and penetration. The result is an ideal personal-protection load for short range. The PDX1-410 is effective in conventional .410 shotguns as well as .410-chambered revolvers or other .410 handguns. And it’s also suitable for varmint and pest control.
When fired from a conventional smoothbore shotgun, the pattern dispersion of the PDX1-410’s BBs is comparable to what you would expect from a standard .410 shotshell, with the three Defense Discs remaining centered in the pattern with an impact velocity comparable to a .32-caliber handgun bullet. When fired from the rifled-bore Judge revolver, the rotation given to the BBs’ shot column spreads the pattern very quickly (about the diameter of a human face at 10 feet), making it extraordinarily effective at extreme close range—just point and shoot. And even at longer distances (say, the length of a large living room), the lesser spread of the Defense Discs’ trajectories will keep their lethal effect on-target.
Taurus Judge revolvers, incidentally, are available in barrel lengths running from two inches in the compact Public Defender versions to six inches in the sport and hunting Tracker versions, with different rates in the pattern spread due to the increased velocities from the longer barrels. Judge owners who use the new PDX1-410 loads should pattern the shells from their particular gun at various typical defense distances to become familiar with their exact delivery characteristics and pattern spread.
Hard-cast bullets (left) are inexpensive, accurate but just a bit messy. Jacketed bullets (right) are much cleaner but cost more. Plated bullets (center) split the difference but have their own issues. |
When it comes to shooting, bullets are an essential component. And, yes, the pun was intended. Which bullet is best? As with so many things in life, the answer starts out as "that depends…."
Let's start by outlining our options. We have jacketed, plated and cast. Swaged is a subset of cast, with some advantages but more downsides in the mix.
Jacketed bullets are made by pounding a disk of copper into a cup, inserting a lead core and bashing the two until they form a unit. They can be full-metal jackets, hollowpoints or softpoints. Usually, the former is made by having the opening in the rear, and the latter two made by having the opening in the front.
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