Showing posts with label .32 ACP. Show all posts
Showing posts with label .32 ACP. Show all posts

Friday, March 26, 2010

Ode to John M. Browning's 1903 Colt, the enduring .32 mouse gun

I shouldn't admit it for fear of getting my membership in Gun Nutz 'R' Us revoked, but there are a few handgun calibers I don't use, roughly speaking anything over .44 Magnum (OK, I'm a wimp, but this wimp can still see and hear, sorta kinda) and anything in between .22 Magnum and 9mm.

That leaves out .380 ACP and a lot of other calibers that are very popular, but so what. And though I failed as a papa by raising a son who carries a .32 ACP Llama 1911, the admirers of .32s are legion. For all .32 lovers, here's a snippet from Dave Campbell at American Rifleman about the most famous of all .32 pistols, the 1903 Colt of John M. Browning's fertile mind.
During their 42-year manufacturing run—1903 to 1945—more than half a million of these pistols were made. The 1903 Colt was quite popular among businessmen,military officers and criminals. Travelling businessmen like my grandfather, who traveled throughout Mexico during the time of Pancho Villa, often carried one as a primary self-defense gun. On its dark side, this diminutive pistol was often chosen as a backup—or New York reload—to a more powerful handgun by criminals during the first half of the last century. It was reportedly a constant companion of gangster Al Capone, and Bonnie Parker allegedly smuggled one to Clyde Barrow who used it spring himself from the jail. The 1903 Colt was also issued as a General Officer’s pistol, either as a backup to the issue 1911 or to be slipped into the pocket of a dress uniform, from the 1940s until 1972, and during World War II, the Offices of Strategic Services issued the little Colt to its officers as well.
I do have a .32 revolver, but it's a .327 Magnum which just incidentally can shoot .32 H&R Magnum (if I could find any), .32 Long and .32 Short. It's a Charter and does not like .32 ACP, which apparently sits too low in the cylinder to reliably ignite. So anyway, even though I'm not a full-fledged .32 gun nut, I thought I'd post the link to the 1903 Colt article for its many admirers. You're welcome.

Thursday, March 4, 2010

The lower and upper limitations of handgun calibers: Choose your own

"A man's got to know his limitations."-Dirty Harry in Magnum Force

That's always been one of my favorite movie quotes by Clint Eastwood and I know mine, both upper and lower, when it comes to handguns.

I have thus far abstained from any handgun smaller in caliber than 9mm and smaller in size than my Kel-Tec PF9 subcompact pocket pistol.

I can shoot it well enough to hit what I want to, within reasonable distance, say 10 to 15 yards max.

But today I listed a handgun that harkens back to a manufacturing period of 1910-17 and I gotta admit, I'm tempted even though it's only .32 ACP. It's a Model 1907 Savage Arms and it's a pretty neat pistol in very good shape, particularly considering its age.

It's got a 10-rd. mag and an external-cocking hammer, which is quite unusual for a single-action pistol. It's also got a combination thumb safety/slide lock which is also unusual. And instead of the heel-mounted magazine release that was common for the period, it has a mag-release lever in the front-bottom of the grip frame. (Besides, Tam's got one.)

It's even reasonably priced on gunbroker at $485, but it is still a .32. Maybe as a fun pistol, I'd be interested, if I had $485 to spare, which I don't.

I've got a .32 revolver, a Charter .327 Magnum, so if I get a hankering to shoot .32s, I can shoot .32 H&R Magnum, .32 Long or .32 Short. I even tried .32 ACP in the Charter, but the hammer strikes apparently aren't hard enough as only one in six ignited.

Then there's the upper limitation I have set for myself, and the S&W .500 Magnum revolver is definitely way beyond line that for me.

I do own the Dirty Harry Model S&W 29, but not because I'm an Eastwood wannabe. I owned a S&W 21 .44 Special at the time I walked into a pawn shop and spied a S&W 24 .44 Special and a S&W 29 .44 Magnum in the counter. I really wanted that Model 24, the adjustable-sights upgrade of the Model 21.

But the S&W 29 was more reasonably priced, plus it had a 4" barrel and the 24 had a 6.5" barrel. I really like 4"-barrel revolvers, that's my favorite size. I went with the 29 and have been so happy with it I later traded away the S&W 21.

But after shooting the .44 Magnum the first time, I knew for sure that is my upper limit. No .454 Casull, .460, .480 or .500 Magnum, nor any other magnum larger than .44. A man's gotta know his limitations and I know mine.