.380-What You Use to Fight Your Way to a Handgun

by
posted on August 25, 2011
** When you buy products through the links on our site, we may earn a commission that supports NRA's mission to protect, preserve and defend the Second Amendment. **
keefe2015_fs.jpg (2)

In our offices, we often discuss issues that matter—at least to us—such as carry guns. One American Rifleman staffer carries a Ruger LCP in .380 ACP with Winchester PDX1 on a daily basis. While this staffer was visiting the office of American Hunter Managing Editor Jeff Johnston (we don’t have the budget for a water cooler), the host came up with a line that is not entirely original, yet completely relevant. “You carry a .380? That’s what you use to fight your way to your pistol.” This is, of course, is a play on firearms trainer Clint Smith’s axiom: “The only purpose for a pistol is to fight your way back to the rifle you should have never laid down.”

I have written previously on the fact that men that I rely on for solid advice on personal protection don’t think a lot of the .380 ACP as a fightstopper. To them it is marginal, at the bottom end of the minimum. Mike Parker once said on “American Rifleman Television”—again not entirely original—“While a 9 millimeter may expand, a .45 won’t shrink.” While a .45 ACP has more power than a 9 mm Luger, and a 9 mm (Johnston’s preferred sub-caliber device) has more power than a .380 ACP, size and weight make a big difference as to whether or not a gun is carried daily. It is better to have a .380 in your pocket holster than a .44 Mag. in your safe. And a six-shot .380 is better than an aluminum baseball bat that won’t ship for three weeks.

It used to be that 9 mm Luger was considered marginal for personal protection, but now that9 mm pistols are designed to be similar in size and weight to the in-vogue .380s, we are seeing a surge in interest in micro-compact, single-stack, recoil-operated 9 mms by consumers who lawfully exercise their Right-to-Carry. Kel-Tec and Kahr Arms led the way on micro 9 mm Luger pistols, with Taurus not far behind. Now we have guns such as the Kimber Solo (look for it on the cover of the September issue of your Rifleman), the Ruger LC9, SIG Sauer P290, Diamondback DB9 and others. We have also seen a report of Beretta's entry to this class, the Nano, but so far we have not had a chance to examine it, so I can offer no opinion.

My bottom line on the .380? The gun you are willing to carry, especially when inconvenient, is the right gun for you. I have a couple of the new generation .380 ACP recoil-operated guns, including a Ruger LCP and a Diamondback—as well as my trusty S&W 442 and a well-worn SIG Sauer P232. Any of these, while not a Springfield SOCOM II, are preferable to nothing at all.

One of the most disturbing images I have viewed was the security camera still (Orwell would be so proud) of a Londoner ignominiously handing his pants to a hooded looter during the riots earlier this month. With one of the natural rights of Englishmen—the right of self-defense of yourself and others—stripped away, property, possessions, collective safety and dignity sure didn’t take long to follow. The principal means of self-defense available to subjects in that land were back-ordered baseball bats from Amazon.co.uk. I assure you, the only way a pipe-wielding hooded thug threatening my life is getting my pants is after the second magazine is empty and the slide locked back. And he’ll likely have to crawl over a pile of hot brass headstamped “FC 380 Auto.”

Latest

Making Keltec Pr57 1
Making Keltec Pr57 1

Making The KelTec PR57 In Wyoming

To make its PR57 handgun, KelTec invested in an entirely new manufacturing facility located in Rock Springs, Wyo. "American Rifleman Television" headed out for an inside look at the company's efficient production process.

Taurus 66 Combat: A New "Fighting Revolver"

First introduced in the 1970s, the Taurus 66 Combat is a medium-frame revolver that has seen several evolutions in its lifetime, and the latest update creates what the company considers "the final word in fighting revolvers."

Review: Taurus GX2

From cars to cellphones, as a product gets more sophisticated, it usually also gets more expensive. And, as modern handguns get more modular and optic-ready, their prices tend to go up.

Rifleman Q&A: A Garand Puzzlement

"We are a father-and-son NRA member tandem in search of an answer regarding the branding of an M1 Garand rifle. We own an M1 rifle that has markings indicating it was a “lend lease to England,” and it also has a .308 barrel/sleeve."

$160K Raised For HAVA At SIG Sauer Event

SIG Sauer hosted its 9th Annual Honored American Veterans Afield (HAVA) Charity Golf event early last month and raised more than $160,000 to support disabled veterans.

Scout The Trail To A General Purpose Rifle

The search for a universal longarm—one suitable for both hunting and defensive scenarios—is a trek that involves a bit of doubling back.

Interests



Get the best of American Rifleman delivered to your inbox.