Please correct me if I am wrong. I understood that +p was developed several decades ago to aid in expansion. Rounds were not expanding reliably enough, and higher velocity was deemed the fix. More pressure = more velocity = more expansion.
However, too much of a good thing was no longer a good thing.
When the 115gr 9mm was driven to +p+ velocity, if frequently expanded too violently and too quickly, offering fragmentation and less penetration.
For the same reason, the .357SIG round does not use a standard 9mm bullet shoved into a .357SIG cartridge. The 9mm bullet isn't designed to stay together at .357SIG velocities. A different bullet is used for the .357SIG round.
Today, bullet manufacturers have developed bullets that will reliably expand over a much wider range of velocities, including the slower velocities found in short barreled handguns.
If the above is true, why do so many keep recommending +p over standard pressure? Standard pressure offers less recoil, faster follow up shots, less wear on the gun, and is generally a little cheaper to buy. If the standard pressure 9mm round still expands at the lower velocities, what is to be gained by going faster? More expansion? Won't that result in less penetration?
While some +p and +p+ rounds have achieved outstanding street results, is this not the result of taking an "old" bullet design and driving it faster? The Gold Dot and the Ranger T both excel at higher velocities, but are they not older designs? For comparison, the HST is pretty new, and the 124gr and 147gr have also reported excellent results, both at +p velocity and standard pressure.
While standard pressure 9mm may not offer the most expansion or the greatest penetration when compared to a similar round in +p or +p+ format, as long as the standard pressure round offers reasonable expansion and if penetration meets the FBI minimum 12", why not go with the softer shooting, faster follow up shooting round?


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