Posted on 03/05/2019 5:23:19 AM PST by w1n1
Pick the right entry point and you're already on your way to enjoying a fun, long-term shooting hobby.
For a new shooter, buying their first handgun can be an intimidating experience. What brand, what style, revolver or semiauto, and most of all what caliber?
Most people jump straight into picking out their favorite handgun without thinking about what caliber it is. Caliber choice is critical for new shooters. Too much gun can be a handful; too little and you might be under gunned.
Beginners looking for a firearm gun to do. For example, a new shooter may desire a firearm that is suitable for self-defense; a self-defense caliber has certain criteria to meet.
A shooter looking for a fun range gun has some different criteria to meet. We are going to first look at the best calibers for beginners, and then provide you with a few examples of popular handguns in each caliber that you should consider when you are first starting out.
TRAITS OF BEGINNER CARTRIDGES
In general, beginners should stick to commonly available, well-reputed handgun calibers. Magnum rounds are often too much of a handful for new shooters, and odd balls are often expensive and hard to find.
Commonality and afford ability are very desirable traits for a caliber to have. If you cannot afford to shoot the caliber regularly, the skills you build will deteriorate.
The same goes for trying to find ammunition in odd calibers. Rounds like the .32 Long are still out there, but they cant be found in most big box stores.
The round should be relatively low recoil. Beginning with powerful, heavy recoiling rounds can actually cause training scars. Training scars are poor habits gathered from poor training and practice.
Magnum calibers in the hands of beginners tend to create an exaggerated and noticeable flinch that pulls a shot off target. Starting with a smaller, lower recoiling caliber and working up to larger calibers is the better way to go. Read the rest of handgun calibers.
You’d think in this day and age people would have someone with a decent grasp of English grammar proof-read their articles, but here we are.
I guided a lady named Pam on a couple of hunts. She was a little ole thing, about 5’3” and weighed every bit of 100 lbs. She hunted with a scoped Freedom Arms .454 Casull and she was very good with it.
Revolver, 22 LR.
Expensive but light trigger pull, heavier (no recoil), and UTTERLY reliable.
Once you have a handle on marksmanship and gun safety, THEN start renting guns and fund what you like.
Yes, Ruger New Model Single Six is fantastic and easy to handle, especially for smaller shooters or hands. A Ruger Target pistol, with a bull barrel, is also great. Both are easy to handle, easy to shoot, incredibly accurate, and very cheap to shoot and shoot and shoot. Can’t beat $0.03 to $0.05 per round!
I believe in getting the right gun for the person.
For me, the right gun is a bazooka. I only want to take one shot to take care of a problem.
Well, MY ability to afford stuff has diminished recently. LOL!
BINGO!
;^)
I started as a child with a BB. Bun. Next a 38 cal revolver, great gun combat special. 22 Sig not as accurate. Contender 22, 30-30, great accuracy but only 1 rd. 45-70 tells you where every bone in your body.
45.........................
A REVOLVER for a first time shooter.
I would never give a semi-auto to someone not used to pistols
.38 Special in 148 grain Hollow Base Wadcutter, a target load, does away with the recoil factor.
Has about as much as a .22 LR.
Not a bad self defense round either.
Another good defense round is the Hornady Personel Defense Lite in 90 grains.
Very low recoil
Whatever is within your budget. Whatever ammo is ready and available more than occasionally at your local ammunition counter. However online purchasing is always optional at this point in time.
What type of site do you want? If it’s a fixed ramp go with what the factory tested at before they boxed it up and shipped it out.
Learn how to maintain it, learn how to take it apart and put it back together again successfully.
Consider a caliber that you can reload if you need to.
Don’t over-gun yourself. A 2nd shot quickly acquired and fired is just as important as a first shot. Maybe more so.
I like my .380 Ruger but I also carry a .40 Smith MP Shield. My service gun is a Glock. I have another small pistol, a Beretta Tomcat in .32ACP. I have kinda small hands and all three fit nicely.
Who ever “Setup” That Shooter
Is a Jerk!
A Desert Eagle of course.
“Youd think in this day and age people would have someone with a decent grasp of English grammar proof-read their articles, but here we are.”
I get the feeling most people are using their phones rather than sitting thier fat butts behind some desk and typing like an old school computer user. Now I fit into the category of sitting behind a desk and typing on an old-school desktop, however a lightning strike took my desk top out and to be honest with you, I got a laptop that I sometimes use but most the time I’m using the phone. And I have had very glaring mistakes often because my phone autocorrects when I hit the Go Button. Because I perused most what I write and have found that voice texting actually works better. But I still have to go back and adjust some punctuation and that clownish autocorrect changes things sometimes if not more often than I wish it would.
I wonder if an edit function would be plausible in the future for this website? That would alleviate a lot of the issue of which you speak. I know I would like one. But perhaps it’s not possible. I am a far cry from a programmer so the intricacies of allowing for an added feature escapes me. But as a relative dummy in the world of computer programming and when I go out and see hundreds and hundreds of websites that allow you to edit your work I cannot understand why it wouldn’t or couldn’t be available here as well.
This ridiculous website again. What a stupid article.
The grammar deficiencies I was referring to were present in the article at the link. But yes, I would also love to see an “edit” feature on this website. And Twitter too!
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