Wednesday, May 9, 2018

S&W 629 .44 Magnum 3" Talo Exclusive


     Back when I started my career in law enforcement the local lads and lasses in blue/brown/grey/what have you were about evenly split on revolvers and semi-auto pistols.  I'd been gobbling up all the firearms information I could for years (pretty much my whole life) and saw the advantages offered by the semi-auto when it came to law enforcement and self-defense.  In my early days of dispatching and spending my off hours riding along "playing reserve" I toted what I had:  a 4" S&W model 19 .357 magnum and later a 2 1/2" S&W Model 66 .357 magnum.  I carried these, making do and learning a bit about concealment as I went.  I made 'em work during our atrociously hot and humid summers but they weren't what you might call "comfortable."  When I was looking at going at last to the police academy, I made what was for me a HUGE investment of about $400 and bought a brand-spanking-new Browning Hi-Power.  That pistol served me well for many years and I still have it today.

     Now here I am retired and finding myself more and more drawn back to revolvers.  I've had and have a host of J-frames and K-frames (or their non-S&W equivalents)  and Mini revolvers from NAA.  A few I (foolishly) traded, while others were issued to me from my former PD's stockpile of condemned weapons.  What I've always wanted, however, even back in my days of steadfastly clinging to semi-autos, is a compact N-frame.  I've always been a fan of the .41 magnum, weirdo that I am, but admit the .44 is much more available and in a wider variety of rounds from which to select.  There was always just "something" about a "chopped and channeled" N-frame that made me smile.

     Now retired and owning most of the guns I'll ever need or want, there are very few on my list that will make me dip into my hard-earned and miserly-saved funds to purchase.  As it happened, I'd been saving for nearly a year, stashing away dollars into my "gun fund" when the latest gun show rolled into town.  I did my usual tour of the show, looking at everything, memorizing tables and prices and found a few items that I thought made excellent "definite maybes."  BUT THEN ... ah, but then, I saw it .... I saw IT.  There, in the case of my favorite gun show dealer was a S&W model 629-6, round-butt .44 magnum with a 3" barrel (the Talo exclusive).  I looked at it, handled it, then handed it back.  Thirty minutes later I was back and filling out the ATF Form 4473.  My Lifetime Retired LEO CCW does not, as happens, have an issued date so I had to go through the whole background check thing.  Unlike usual, there was no delay (some bad guy somewhere has a few numbers in common with me, I guess).  Then, revolver and all original case and stuff tucked under my arm, I bought a couple of boxes of Hornady Custom 240 gr XTP magnum ammo from the charming lady who also frequents these shows and, much like the aforementioned dealer, nearly always walks away with a chunk of my money (though the prices of both tables are not to be beaten).

S&W 3" Model 629 .44 Magnum TALO 
"A civilized weapon for a more ..." well, you know the quote ^_^


    A few minutes online and I had an IWB holster, speed loader, and pair of speed strips en route as well.  At last the dream was mine.


     Now then, this big N-frame comes with some absolutely beautiful wooden stocks.  They hug the round-butt profile and have a "fish scale" pattern on the sides which seems to grant good purchase without being abusive to the skin.  Along the backstrap the wood protrudes a barely discernible amount past the metal of the frame.  I was worried this would make for painful shooting, but later found this to not be the case at all.  Otherwise, fit and finish are typical Smith & Wesson quality and to me, on par with what one can expect for a revolver with a $864 price tag (taxes bumped this up to just over $900 bucks making this THE MOST EXPENSIVE gun I own ... or I should say the most I've ever paid for any of my guns as allegedly I own a few that are worth that or more even though I got them much more cheaply).  Double action trigger pull is stout but smooth.  Single action is smooth, very light (I mean VERY light) and breaks like the proverbial (or maybe trite) glass rod.  Sights are fully adjustable featuring a white outline rear and a red-ramp insert front.

  
Relative size differences between N-frame (top), K-frame (center) and J-frame (bottom).
The mighty magnum pair -- NAA .22 magnum (bottom) and S&W 629 (top)
 
In it's "chopped and channeled" format, the 3" .44 magnum is roughly
the same size as the Walther P99, though much thicker and heavier

     My holster (Tagua gun leather) came in and I've been toting it around in the early May heat here with just a light shirt over a tank-top.  The only one I found immediately available was for a 4" N-frame, but experience has taught me short barreled guns, especially short barreled heavy guns sometimes don't stabilize well in the belt.  I figured that extra inch of leather would provide a soft stabilizing fin.  Well, that and given the scarcity (and price) of left-handed N-frame IWB holsters, I took what I could get.  I lucked out and got this with free express shipping for a cost less than I'd have paid for the shipping.  I've had Tagua products before and I rate them on par with Galco and DeSantis though often for half or even a third of the price.
Tagua Gunleather IWB holster
Holster is for a 4" but given the availability of left-handed IWB  holsters
for N-frames, and the price of this one, I took what I could get.
Despite being a HUGE "hawgleg" with the right belt and
holster an N-frame can tuck away very nicely for concealed carry.
     Carrying the revolver around a bit, I found it conceals very well in this holster.  However, a good belt (Galco instructor's belt in my case) is essential for a big, heavy gun like this one.  While waiting for the holster, I've utilized the old-cop standby of "Mex-carry" (stuck in the waistband like the brave Mexican rebels who fought for independence and whose success is celebrated this very month with  muchas cervezas.  To be honest, holsterless carry was only so-so.  The large cylinder had to slide below the belt to be secure which hampered draw speed.  Oh, and of course, in the interest of not sounding like I encourage such [ahem] blah-blah-blah, only use a holster, blah-blah, yadda, yadda.  Y'all on board now?  Got a holster?  Good then let's carry on.

     Today I got a chance to at least put it through its paces if not do a full evaluation.  I had a selection of ammo (Fiocchi 240 gr JSP magnums, PPU 240 gr JHPs, Hornady Custom 240 gr XTP JHPs, and Hornady 180 gr XTP .44 Specials).  I hung up a B-27 target, propped up a couple of Pepper poppers and made ready.

     Accuracy was okay.  I got a few rounds in the same hole if I did my part (which became increasingly difficult, truth be told).  The sights were not set to point-of-aim for me so I did a lot of adjusting and testing.  I got them dialed in "pretty close" and by then my hands were, in my opinion, no longer capable of fine motor skills.  Even at the worst, however, the weapon was "combat accurate" and I kept every shot in places that, were the target a bad guy, he would be instantly "reformed."  I just like to be able to make one big, ragged hole when I shoot.  I suspect I'd have been able to with carefully tuned and much softer loadings.  As it was ... well, hey, it was absolutely fine and I didn't buy it for a target gun.  For all that, too, it did not seem to really prefer one of the tested rounds over another and they all felt like they were every bit of "full house magnums."

     In the interest of full disclosure I need to point out that some of the problem was me.  In addition to my new gun jitters (it's a real thing), I was getting frustrated because twice as I had the sights almost dialed in perfectly, my skipped lunch, hypoglycemic self goofed up and I had to start all over.  When I finally got tired of shooting paper (again, I'd managed to put multiple shots in one hole a few times from 7 yards and hits from 15 and 25 yards were respectable), I started going for the Pepper Poppers.  By this time my hands simply hurt.  Those beautiful wooden stocks do not fit my hand well at all and frankly beat the ever loving Hades out of my thumb joints.  I alternated hands since my primary shooting hand (left) has a worse case of osteoarthritis, but after a few cylinder fulls, the balls of both thumbs had had quite enough, thank you so very much.  So, from 25 and 30 yards I just aimed one-handed (left and right respectively) and shot the poppers.  Both took good, very solid hits.  Come to find, despite my performance on paper, both hits were centered and were pretty much right where I'd been aiming.  So, maybe I got it sighted in after all.

Although these are some of the most beautiful revolver stocks
I've ever seen, they do not fit my hand well at all.

That top corner beats the ball of the thumb like a ball-peen hammer
being swung by an iron worker out the window of a passing pickup truck!
     I plan on replacing those stunningly gorgeous stocks with some recoil absorbing rubber ones ASAP.  This is a gun I plan on carrying quite a bit and shooting more than just every once in a while.  I know it is capable of far better than the admittedly quite good performance I wrung out of it today and maybe having my hands not shaking in shock will help.  That said, recoil is not horrible and if I had to crank off one or six rounds fast even now, about six hours after shooting a silly amount of magnum ammo, I could do it without a problem.  I once shot a Scantium airweight j-frame, firing 5 rounds of standard pressure 158 grain .38 special ammo with one hand and 5 rounds of 158 gr +p with the other.  Had my now sadly passed friend (owner of said weapon) offered me twenty bucks I would not have fired one more cylinder full that day.  Today I only stopped because I had started to add up the cost of what I'd already fired and remembered I don't get paid again until the end of the month.  Nope, common sense and the preservation of my hands' dexterity had nothing to do with me stopping ... same as way back when another dear friend introduced me to his S&W Model 629 "Mountain Revolver" .44 magnum.  By the end of that day we were cursing every time he found so much as one more round for us to dare the other to shoot.  Back in those days we lived on dares and testosterone and that's how we kept the herd thinned out of weak ones.  Ah, youth...

    The .44 specials I fired were quite comfortable even after my hands were throbbing from the full-house magnums.  They tended to impact just a tad low, as one might expect.  I dialed the rear sight down as far as I could and they were still just under the black oval containing the X-ring on the B-27 target.  So, if you aimed at the heart you'd get the bottom of the heart.  Aim center-chest and you'll get heart and spine of a bad guy.  Just know they shoot a tiny bit lower so if you're, say, aiming for the head of a water moccasin (as I was nearly called up to do about an hour later and elsewhere) you might wanna know to aim a wee bit high).  The old adage of loading your .44 magnum with .44 specials for anti-personnel use is not bad advice, especially given the improvements in that old .44 special cartridge.  I'll be experimenting with some other loadings as I can lay my mitts upon them.  Note to self:  clean up junk room, set reloading press back up, and get .44 magnum dies.

     I'm quite happy with my big/little revolver!  Empties ejected smoothly and completely every time and the brass looked good.  It points and aims with that quality that only a revolver can have and despite its weight and girth (cylinder girth) it tucks away quite well behind the hip.  It'll take a while for my hip and waist (now with less padding than it's had in years) to get used to the new hawgleg, but that's part of the fun.  I imagine my Walther P99 will get far more belt-time but I can see me toting this piece of street artillery more often than I thought I would.  It's plenty accurate (I will work on my technique and ammo selection to see just HOW accurate it can be), and just feels good in the hand.  Yes, the recoil with full power .44 magnum ammo is, to say the least, bracing.  But I'll leave you with the words of another friend and former co-worker of mine who (all 4'10", 90 pound of her) had just cranked off 7 rapid shots from my 1911 .45 and commented, "Yeah, it kicks.  So what?!  Are your friends a bunch of p[wimps]ies?!"

Friday, April 13, 2018

Walther P99 AS


Walther P99 AS

My name is Tim and I’m a Waltherholic.  Yep, given pretty much any similar choice and I’ll take the one with that famous banner stamped thereupon.  Way back in 1997, the year before I made detective (man, that statement makes me feel old!) Walther introduced the P99 and it was an immediate hit.  Not only did it impress several nations’ militaries and police forces, but it was a hit with me.  Something about it just struck a nerve and I knew I had to have one.  The pistol has gone through several variations through the years and we now arrive at the P99 AS (Anti-Stress) pistol.  Gone is the proprietary rail on the dustcover and in its place we find not only cleaner lines but a more universal rail allowing the end user to fit a wider variation of his or her preferred aftermarket implements such as lights and lasers.  More on that in a wee bit.  I wanted a P99 and I have finally at long last brought one home.

My new Walther P99 AS

Upon my retirement from the police agency with whom I spent most of my career, our Animal Control officer, knowing my love of the design, brought his P99 .40 to work with him so I could have the experience of shooting it.  I shot it quite a bit that last day and greatly enjoyed it.  Call me a stickler, though, but I wanted the 9x19mm version.  Ballistic reasons aside, once I retired I would no longer have the key to the ammo closet and would thus need to secure my own shooting fodder.  Costs to income ratio being what they are, I wanted a more affordable round.  Also, every .40 S&W caliber pistol I’ve ever shot had quite pronounced recoil and muzzle flip (well ahead of the .45 acp, in my opinion) and my friend’s P99 was no different.  Although it was softer shooting than our issued SIG P226s and P229s, it was still quite a thump to my somewhat arthritic hands. 

I looked for, handled and priced several examples but all were priced well outside my range.  The last example I saw at a local gun show, admittedly in excellent condition, was priced at $600 used.  Fast forward about 3 years and I found a like new in box, with all the goodies Walther P99 on an auction site.  Cost, 2-day shipping and transfer fee at my LGS all totaled $400.  How could I say no?  Obviously I didn’t and I thus became the proud owner of a very nice pistol.

My high-cap 9x19mm choices for CCW these days is usually my Browning Hi-Power or my Glock 26.  I love that old Hi-Power and despite its 13 round magazine, it hides pretty well even under a t-shirt.  Alas, it has a lot of sharp edges (and a notoriously stabby hammer spur) and, not to sound wimpy, but it’s a might heavy too.  Normally that’s not an issue and goodness knows it’s ridden many a day IWB back in my “I have one duty/off-duty gun” days.  But now, in my 50s, things like sciatica and other old-man issued limit how much weight I can tote all day, every day (or at least some days).  The Glock 26 has been a long-time companion as well, both as a backup and at times as a primary duty pistol.  I keep three mags loaded for it, a flush-fit 10-round mag, another 10-rounder fitted with a +2 floorplate giving me a pinky rest and a total mag capacity of 12 rounds, and a 17-round magazine fitted with an X-grip to fill in the space between the floorplate and the bottom of the pistol’s abbreviated grip.  The latter choice essentially gives me a model 17 with a model 26 barrel.  That’s the way I keep it for in-the-house and bedside duties and frequently how I carried it, although the 12 round mag probably got a little bit more time for IWB carry.  That baby Glock is great, easy to shoot, and surprisingly accurate.  Alas, like all hi-cap Glocks, it’s a bit thick.  Call me old fashioned but I absent a thumb safety I like my first shot to be Double-Action as well.  Yeah, yeah, but that’s how I feel.

I’ve looked at and considered a Glock 19, one of the pistols I consider about perfect for overall carry.  The 26 is so short that it doesn’t stabilize well in most IWB holsters I’ve tried (with the exception of Aliengear’s excellent hybrid rig).  The 19 has just enough more barrel length to stabilize the piece and the little bit of extra grip length barely compromises discreet carry (body size and carry methods vary, of course). But the Walther P99 is overall just a fraction shorter, and though it’s ever so slightly taller (.21”) it’s 1.65 ounces lighter. and .7” thinner.  That thinness is important for anything that shares my waistband.  While I’m not obese and am considerably lighter than I was when I retired (how I hate that fat guy photo of me that hangs on the wall in my old department) thinner is generally better for IWB carry.

The weapon arrived and other than a tiny scratch on the left side of the slide just below the front edge of the wide ejection port, it looked like it had never been out of the box.  Frankly, that could well have occurred during shipping from the factory as a few weeks of nearly constant carry have produced a bit more wear that that tiny, hard to see scratch.  I’m not saying to the finish isn’t durable and there is certainly no rust.  But there are very faint marks on the trigger guard where the security device in one of my holster engages.  Again, hardly noticeable, and any gun you carry is going to get banged up some.  If such bothers you, leave it in the safe.  Along with the weapon was the case, all the paperwork including warranty card and test target from the Walther factory.  Three alternate sized backstraps were included along with four front sights of differing heights (one came installed on the pistol).  Two 15 round magazines came along as well.  The medium sized backstrap was installed on the weapon and it fit me fine.  I tried the smaller one, though and though it was barely perceptibly smaller, it felt quite good and I figured adds just a pinch to concealability so that’s the one I went with.

I dug out three holsters for it, one a Don Hume leather clip-on IWB leather holster.  It was made for a SIG P229 but fits the P99 very well so I figured it would give me a fair assessment without me having to purchase what might be yet another resident for the dreaded Box of Misfit Holsters (c’mon, we all have one).  The  Aliengear hybrid IWB for my Glock 26 fit it securely enough that I used it for a while too.  Finally I have a Safariland 578 GLS paddle holster that adjusts to fit a wide variety of similarly sized pistols.  It was fitted to my Glock 26 and the P99 fit into it fine but it could move about just a little.  So a turn or two with an Allen wrench and it now fits my Walther like it was made for it.  Lacking belt tension (the main manner of security for the two IWB holsters I mentioned, the GLS needs to fit a pistol just right.  Too tight and you’ll play havoc drawing it, too loose and … well, I doubt your weapon will fall out as that trigger guard catch is pretty darn secure, but it will rattle around a bit and why risk breaking a holster and/or losing a gun?  

The pistol carries quite well whether in a holsters similar to those I mentioned or with just a Kydex trigger-guard cover and lanyard.  For that matter, although not prescribed and certainly not to be recommended (L-I-A-B-I-L-I-T-Y) it carries well in the old “Mex-Carry” holsterless, stuffed-in-the-waistband-behind-a-snug-belt manner too.  That’s how we did it “back in MY day” when those of us who carried off duty couldn’t afford expensive holsters but were leery of anything cheap enough to be in our cop-pay price range.  A little forward cant (i.e. FBI tilt) keeps the pistol from printing even under a t-shirt.  Frankly I’m amazed I can walk around carrying it while shopping, walking the dog in the park, etc. and a duty-sized (if arguably compact) pistol can go unnoticed even when only covered by a t-shirt.  The weapon is light enough to be quite comfortable for all day carry as well.  That's something that cannot always be said for many other weapons featuring all steel frames (although I do love those heavy, solid frames, great throw-back that I am).

So, how does it shoot?  Quite well, as one should expect.  A bit of a caveat here is in order, however.  First off, do not, unless you want to embarrass yourself and ruin your trip to the range, even think about putting aluminum cased ammo in this pistol.  I bought a 100 round box of Independence brand aluminum 115 gr FMJs that my local big box store had on sale.  I got a failure to eject (dreaded double-feed) during the first magazine run and by round #38 I had a failure to extract that resulted in an aluminum case stuck firmly in the chamber.  I was later able to get it out without damaging the weapon but that box of ammo is a definite no-go for me, at least for this weapon.  The Walther’s massive extractor darn near tore the rim off the cartridge case, too, so there’s that.

Oh, and if you do any research you’ll find that there is one often repeated criticism of the pistol and that is the design of its windage adjustable rear sight.  The manual says just turn the screw, you know, like you do with any other screw-adjusted rear sight?  Alas, it lies.  See, there is this spring powered plunger that rises out of the top of the slide on the right side.  The top of the plunger has a notch.  The adjustment screw on the rear site has a square head.  Do you see where this is going?  To adjust the sight, the plunger needs to be held down very, very carefully and the screw turned by ¼ turn increments.  Make very sure when all is said and done the rear sight screw is firmly sitting in that slot on the plunger.  Most likely you’ll turn the screw, and wind up popping off the rear sight.  Don’t fret if that happens.  Set the sight atop its slot, guesstimate where it needs to be, turn the screw until it looks right, reinsert the sight in its notch from the left while holding down the plunger and fitting it to the screw-head.   Yeah … or just replace the rear sight with one that doesn’t require that silly, over-thought, over-engineered spring/plunger assembly bit of engineering madness.  Hey, it’s a German gun so something had to be over-engineered.   More than likely you won’t need to adjust the rear sight anyway as it comes sighted from the factory (although there are stories of one test-firer at Walther who feels the need to drift rear sights all the way to the left … ah, but I digress).  If it shoots low or high with your chosen carry load, simply replace the front sight with one of the extras.  That process is fairly simply.  Or, hey, choose another load.  Handgun rounds aren’t death-rays, so likely as not whatever you wind up carrying will do about as well as anything else.  Reliability and Accuracy are the primary qualities in a handgun of this type.

Anyway, following my learning experience with alternate ammunition casings, I returned to the range with a much better selection of ammo, including rounds from Federal, CCI, and other top name brands (I'm pretty sure brass cases ammo of good manufacture should work fine).  115 and 124 grain rounds were quite accurate and the installed front sight was indeed the correct one, saving me any further drama.  I began by shooting at 7 yards.  I fired 5 rounds of CCI 115 grain FMJs going for something close to one round per second or slightly slower.  I was initially shocked and chagrined to see only two holes in the target.  One, right where I’d been aiming, and another not quite an inch higher and left.  My angst turn to pride, however, as I got closer and realized that three rounds went into the first hole and two in the second.  Not bad, not bad at all, new gun jitters and everything!  I fired some more, varying from a few steps to 25 yards, but I won’t bore you with the details.  Suffice to say it is a very accurate handgun.  I noticed it was still shooting just a pinch to the right.  I fumbled with the rear sight for a bit and it now shoots ever so slightly to the left.  I mean not so much that you’d notice, especially at combat ranges and even at 25 yards it was all around the bulls-eye.  At 50 yards I could hit a Pepper popper every shot aiming dead center.  But at 75 yards I had to aim right about the width of the front sight blade to knock down a Pepper popper.  At that point I was just showing off so I left the sights where they were.  Please note in the below groups that I had "new gun jitters" which, I suspect, accounted for more of the off-center shots, especially elevation issues) than did any sight mis-alignment.  Of course, that also means that any degree of decent accuracy is due more to the pistol's inherent accuracy and ease of shooting than to my own skills.  Hmm ... I probably should have left that bit out, eh? ^_^

A quick 5-shot group from 7 yards
              (yes that's 5 hits, 3 in one hole, 2 in another) 

Five more shots, from 15 yards this time
               (total of 10 hits showing)


And five more 25 yards (showing the total group)

I tried some rapid draw-and-fire drills and found the weapon pointed very naturally.  In one drill, I started maybe 3 yards from the target, drew and began firing while stepping to the side and then backpedaling.  I stopped shooting once I got almost to the seven yard line.  I was shooting very fast and I don’t think I did more than just glance at the sights once or twice.  Nevertheless I could cover all the shots with the bottom of one of the P99’s magazines.  It didn’t seem to favor one brand or weight (115 or 124 gr) over another, at least in my informal and practical testing.  If I were shooting bulls-eye matches I’d probably test many other loads.  Or more likely I’d be loading my own.  For that matter, if I were doing any serious bulls-eye shooting I most likely would be using a purpose built target pistol and not a compact duty weapon.

The "AS" in the model name P99 AS means "Anti-Stress" and refers to it's trigger action.  When one first loads the weapon in the common manner for loading a semi-automatic pistol, the internal striker is cocked, making the weapon in essence, a single-action pistol.  The trigger, however, stays forward.  That is the "Anti-Stress" setting which let's you have a single-action pistol with the trigger in the same starting point as it would be if it were being carried double action.  When you apply the initial tiny bit of pressure to the triggerit rolls back effortlessly with your continued finger pressure to the "cocked" position where it stacks to about a 4.5 pound single action pull weight. That "cocked" position is also where the trigger stops after being fired and on subsequent shots.  The shooter has two options here.  First, if you like to keep things short and light, once you've fired and want to go back to trigger-forward mode, you can retract the slide just about 1/8 of an inch and let it got back home (mine is still so new and stiff I usually have to give it a bump on the rear of the slide to be totally sure it's back in battery).  The trigger will jump back into its forward post once more.  Or, if you want your first shot to be double action (a'la ye olde typical DA/SA semi-auto "wondernine") simply depress the little oblong button on top of the left side of the slide, just a wee bit forward of the rear sight.  That will decock the firing mechanism and your first shot will then require a longer yet smooth and quite manageable trigger pull (9 pounds according to the factory).  This is the way I prefer to carry mine as I am quite used to the DA/SA style of pistol and lacking a manual safety (I know, I know, I'm a dinosaur) I would rather have a slightly heavier and longer initial trigger pull.  Sure, I know, there are ten thousand reasons why I'm wrong but I did carry a gun for most of my life (professionally), went through a LOT of upscale firearms training (including FBI's SWAT course back in my SWAT days), and have had to "draw down" on more than a few folks who were determined to bring harm to myself or others.  So I like to think I have at least some degree of first hand knowledge over some arm-chair commandos and range rats regarding what works well vs. what might not.  That said, I really like the options on this pistol and find shooting it either way (with the relatively light DA first shot or with the respectably light and smooth SA) to be accurate and easy.

There is a round hole in the rear of the slide through with the red colored end of the striker's cocking indicator will protrude if the weapon is not in DA mode.  You can watch the indicator drop back into the slide when you press the decock button atop the slide.

Oh, insofar as my chosen load, I decided against my normal “old boy” load of Federal's excellent 9BPLE 124 gr +P+ and went instead with Federal’s standard pressure 124 grain HST jacketed hollow points.  I did a lot of research and I’m not losing much velocity (well under 100fps) but in all the test I’ve seen the HST performs spectacularly and without the added wear I might bring to my pistol with +P+ pressures.  I’m not saying this is my forever load but I like it and the pistol likes it (that’s what I was hitting the poppers with at 50 and 75 yards).  Again, though, any quality load you choose should serve you quite well.  I've said it many times, pistol bullets poke little holes, period.  Shove a piece of 9mm drill rod (or 10mm, or 11mm, or what have you) and the results I would imagine will be very similar to what a similarly sized handgun bullet will do, with the exception of bone fragmentation.  Okay, also, contact shots add the effects of expanding gases going into the wound but insofar as the damage from a bullet's path, I stand by my drill rod analogy.  Still, you may want something with enough "uumph" to get through light cover and to reach the vitals of a bad guy even at weird angles, but not exit a human body (or at least not go two blocks down the road and through an exterior wall into someone's nursery).  Frankly, that's asking a lot from any handgun round, but modern defensive ammo manufacturers have come a long way and, IMHO, the HST line is usually about the closest as we can get to that magic bullet.

To sum up, the Walther P99 is an excellent pistol for someone searching for either a great service pistol or a good home defense or CCW handgun.  We're in the height of spring here on the sunny (and bloody hot) Alabama Gulf Coast so we'll see how well it carries in the dreaded summer heat soon enough.  I expect it'll stand up to Summertime abuses far better than I usually manage to.  My prediction is that my new P99 will prove an excellent summer carry pistol and may even get carried in times and places where I may only otherwise have had "just" a micro .380.  Time will tell.  In the meantime, I think I need to go shoot my new pistol some more.

 Overall Observations
Dimensions / Weight
7.1” length, 5.3” height, 1.1” width
Caliber / Capacity
9x19mm / 15 round magazines
(.40 S&W available with 12 rd mags)
Action
DA/SA striker fired with “Anti-Stress” option
Pros
·         Very accurate and Reliable (with good ammo)
·         Lightweight for the size/capacity,
·         Rounded Edges that make for quite comfortable carry.
·         Overall a very ambidextrous design
·         Affordable after-market holsters, sights, magazines, parts and such are easy to find.
Cons
·         Rear sight is over-engineered and if you need to tinker with it, be careful or better yet, replace it (not a huge deal but worth noting).
·         Not a fan of aluminum cased ammo (again, not a big deal but you need to know this in case you hit the bargain bin on your way to the range).
Comments:
It’s a Walther!  Enough said! J