I have yet to hunt in bear country my thoughts on a backup pistol are similar to my thoughts on a personal defense pistol I would rather have a double action 6 shot revolver than an automatic due to the fact I do not believe I could clear a jam fast enough if it were to happen with a dangerous animal of any sort bering down on me with the double action its just pull the trigger again no thinking involved I am not discounting the autos as I own and shoot a few this is just my opinion and you know what they say about opinionsTalking about areas where bears, cougars, etc can be found. Or do you just carry pepper spray, where aim doesn't have to be dead on. Moving to Montana in a month or so and curious to what people carry and what your reasoning is...whatever i decide to do I want it to be an informed decision somthe reasoning is important to me.
What kind of holster do you use? Was looking at a thigh rig so it would always be there. Don't like a chest rig to much stuff in the way. Regular holster would be in the way of pack belt. Put it on the pack belt and when you take it off no longer have instant accessI found in most places out west the wind always blows so I don't use pepper spray. It could be a bad thing if your on the downwind side if you have to deploy the spray.
With that said, in Grizz country I carry a 10 MM Glock when hunting. You never know when they will come in to your space such as; when dressing out game and that rifle of yours is propped up 15 feet from you against a tree. That sidearm maybe quicker to reach and eliminate the threat provided you can 'hit' with it. Also, carrying a firearm is sort of...cool.
I use a cheap nylon type holster I purchased from a sporting goods store. I attached it to my belt in a croossdraw fashion. Works for me.What kind of holster do you use? Was looking at a thigh rig so it would always be there. Don't like a chest rig to much stuff in the way. Regular holster would be in the way of pack belt. Put it on the pack belt and when you take it off no longer have instant access
That contradicts about everything I have read recently. A lot of alaskan natives are switching to a glock 20 because of the capacity. They are claiming 15 rounds is better than 5 or six and a 220 gr hardcast from a 10mm still has plenty of penetration to make it to the vitals or penetrate the skull into the brain. Really the latter is what is going to stop the bear. So would you rather have 15 tries at hitting a small moving target like a brain or 5?But better three 300 grain rounds at a high velocity than 5 or 6 slower 300 grainers from a 10 mm that may just **** off a boar grizzly
That contradicts about everything I have read recently. A lot of alaskan natives are switching to a glock 20 because of the capacity. They are claiming 15 rounds is better than 5 or six and a 220 gr hardcast from a 10mm still has plenty of penetration to make it to the vitals or penetrate the skull into the brain. Really the latter is what is going to stop the bear. So would you rather have 15 tries at hitting a small moving target like a brain or 5?
Penetration into the brain is penetration into the brain - doesnt matter if it is with a 180gr projectile or a 300gr projectile. I would rather have 15 shots while be able to acquire my site picture faster for follow-up shots.
You are missing the point. Its not all about energy. At some point you need enough to penetrate the skull and reach the brains, but once you have that much, Its about accuracy and penetration, through the skull into the brain. Also, You aren't accounting for a situation where you shoot several times and this ends up on the ground. This dude should have been shooting better bullets, but it still illustrates my point:Well if your unwilling to train and you only shoot your G19 once a year than yeah a G20 makes more sense than a revolver I guess. If your telling me that a 10mm with like 750 foot pounds of energy at best is better than a .44/.45 LC/.454 with twice that your not thinking about what you're saying. As an added benefit the .44 class has much better sectional density so the chances of the bullet going where you want it to after it hits 3" of hair, skin, and fat is much better.
At the end of the day, how many shots are you going to have time for regardless of the platform? Give yourself a 3-5 second timer, put a target at 7 m and see how many times you can hit it with a double action revolver in a real caliber and a G20. Remember you need about twice the number of hits with a 10mm to match the energy delivered by a .44. Good luck and let us know.