Re: Pistol for Grizzly Bear Country
<div class="ubbcode-block"><div class="ubbcode-header">Originally Posted By: Wintermute</div><div class="ubbcode-body">Honestly, I have to disagree with all of the 10mm for a bear recommendations. All the hunters in Alaska I've talked to, the minimum recommended for a grizzly was a .44 mag with a 300gr or higher hardcast bullet. .454 or .500S&W were considered better. Stainless DA revolvers with no more than a 4" barrel were the primary recommendation.
I talked to guys there who did say you could take down a bear with a 41mag or a .357...if you had a clear clean shot and knew what to aim at. They said that in an attack though, the bear is usually on you before you could do a damn thing about a clean aimed shot and you would just end up trying to put rounds into it while it was on top of you. For that, a DA revolver worked well since jammed against the bear it wouldn't malfunction.
If in an attack you could get your gun and fire, you wouldn't be picking a target on the bear, just pretty much shooting into it at really close range. Alot of bullets may hit bone or other heavily protected areas like the bears head and if you didn't have something massive enough to punch through the bone you'd just end up dead (honestly, if you're actually attacked by a grizzly, you're chances aren't that great no matter what you're carrying).
I wouldn't take an auto and I definitely wouldn't go with anything less than a .44mag with Garrett ammunition.
If you're just worried about a Washington blackbear, then that's one thing...a 10mm would work fine for that. For a grizzly, you're probably just going to be underpowered.
--Wintermute </div></div>
I respect your take on this. However, I think some consideration has to be given to capacity and shootability. I have a 4" Smith 500 as well as a Glock 20.
The Glock holds 15+1, which gives LOTS of oppurtunities to miss, while still having ammo left over to score hits with.
*****I've never had to draw/fire a pistol in a stressfull situation - like a charging bear... But I ASSume having a lot of ammo on tap to spray in the direction of the incoming threat would be an advantage.
Not that it's impossible, but rapid firing a smith 500 in DA is a tough thing to do, especially with high power loads with high sectional density (the ones you want to shoot bears with). Perhaps someday I'd be able to do it, but I will probably spend $10,000 on ammo learning. Currently, I can do a mag dump from my Glock 20 a bunch faster than I can fire 5 rounds from my 500.
So I guess when you get right down to it, are you better off going with a caliber/weapon you have time to fire one well-aimed bombshell shot, or firing many smaller and less powerful rounds?
No disrepect intended! A talking point, more than anything.