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Hollow tip with a blue ball?
ginmaster
Member Posts: 2,669 ✭✭✭✭✭
I picked these two up a bit ago and have been wondering about the bullet tip. It appears that they are plastic or a bonded material. The bullets look like odd hollow points, kinda like flower pedals. They both are headstamped RP +P .45 Auto and 9mm Luger respectively. I looked on the Remington ammo sight and found no such animals. Traditionally blue can mean tracer in some military terms but thats not the case here. Any ideals what these are?
Stay Alert! Stay Alive. Good luck out there.
Stay Alert! Stay Alive. Good luck out there.
Comments
"When I cease learning...I'm dead"(Me)
"When I was 14 I used to marvel at how ignorant my old man was...by the time I was 21 I was truelly amazed at how much the old bugger had learned in the intervening 7 years!" Samuel Clemens
"History is written by winners"(Patton)
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"There is nothing lower than the human race...except the French" (Samuel Clemens)
Stay Alert! Stay Alive. Good luck out there.
http://www.thegunsource.com/shopping_category.aspx?idcategory=18&idmanufacturer=166
Stay Alert! Stay Alive. Good luck out there.
NRA Life Member
Jim Kammerer
I believe the ones with the blue tip mean that they are filled with a bunch of tiny little pellets. This would be for minimal penetration, but would cause one hell of an infection, if left untreated.
The ones with the gray tip, on the other hand, contain a couple larger "buck shot" like pellets..
I agree, toss a couple of these in your clip along with your regular self defence ammo.. Just make sure they cycle properly first.
"A clean gun is a happy gun" Spaz
These are polymer ball tipped Powerball brand ammo.....I think thats a proprietary brand made by the aforementioned using reclaimed brass. THey are intended to act the same way a hollowpoint does, with the added benefit that the polymer ball forces the jacket/bullet material apart the way the hollowpont would, but does not get plugged up by foreign matter the way hollowpoints sometimes do. When this occurs, a hollowpoint turns into something more like an FMJ bullet, i.e., no expansion. Intended to be a failsafe type hollowpoint replacement. Still being sold I believe.
"When I cease learning...I'm dead"(Me)
"When I was 14 I used to marvel at how ignorant my old man was...by the time I was 21 I was truelly amazed at how much the old bugger had learned in the intervening 7 years!" Samuel Clemens
"History is written by winners"(Patton)
"You get a lot farther with a kind word and a gun than you do with a kind word alone!"(Al Capone)
"There is nothing lower than the human race...except the French" (Samuel Clemens)
I think the real selling point for the Corbon Power Ball round is that it will work like a FMJ in 1911's. I find my Kimber just doesn't feed 230grn Corbons at all. The power ball would be the way to go.
Regards,
Glaser it probably the best round you could carry for a human animal, do not let the name fool you, it is called a safety slug due to the fact it will not over penetrate walls or will not ricochet due to total energy transfer upon impact, autopsy's have shown when a perp is shot center mass it appears to look like a small hole someone stuck a shotgun in and pulled the trigger, and no one has ever survived a center mass shot with a glaser safety slug
Look at the specs
.32 acp 1200 fps 176 ft#'s energy
.380acp 1350 fps 283 ft#'s energy
.38 special 1650fps 484 ft #'s energy
.45 acp 1350fps 587 ft#'s energy
draw back, they are expensive must be replaced every few years, or if fluids soak into the blue it will make them brittle
God is good. God is great.
Only God can make a Boatswain's Mate!
"Frangible" bullets are also unlikely to injure innocent bystanders, as they will fragment upon striking any substantial object. This prevents the bullet from going through multiple walls & entering the next house/apartment. It also reduces the possibility of ricochets.
Tests on animals have shown that this type ammo is more effective at one-shot kills than any comparable solid bullets on the market. However, no LEA in the US (to my knowledge) permits their use, & stories about their use by civilians are rare.
Neal
F&AM, NRA Life (25 yrs)
"The people never give up their liberties but under some delusion."
Edmund Burke (1729-97)