yeah posted mostly to get your opinions
#1
Super Moderator
Thread Starter
Join Date: Dec 2017
Location: texas
Posts: 1,201
yeah posted mostly to get your opinions
- you seldom find people how once having used these pistol caliber carbines,
-
- be aware that the pistol caliber carbines
- (most are available in 9mm para caliber,
- with
- 40 S&W and 10mm and 45 acp
- who don,t have a strong opinion either favorable or negative,
- they are either appreciated for lower recoil,
- lower cost ammo and being a handy personal defensive weapon,
- or as many guys see them,
- a rather archaic , tool that has decades ago been superseded,
- with the much more powerful ,
- m1 carbine,
- AR-15/
- AK-47 style carbines
- These other caliber options like .40 S&W and 10mm and 45 acp
- are generally much more scarce or limited availability versions)
- are fun to plink with and ammo's reasonably priced
- these can be fun for informal plinking.
- and certainly would in some cases be a good personal defensive weapon for the home,
- or wife to have available in your home
- ,as recoil and muzzle blast is very very low and even a novice can generally shoot these well,with minimal practice,
- provided shes willing to gain familiarity and practice in its use.
- but its a weapon platform the military in most countrys no longer issues
- ,in significant numbers,
- they are generally reserved for special ops troops in very limited numbers
- pistol caliber carbines are not generally used by most front line combat troops,
- and there's a damn good reason,
- most pistol caliber carbines are almost the size and weight of an intermediate rifle caliber carbine,
- in calibers like 223/5.56 and 7.62/39 and similar cartridges,
- those calibers have more than twice the punch,
- and three times the effective range.
- most of the current commercial available pistol carbines could never pass military durability trials
- (the UZI , H&K MP 5 and AK and AR 15 based versions are an exception)
- yeah, police and security forces use some versions,
- so ask yourself if you were given a choice in weaponry and in either case,
- weight and size were similar.
- the smaller pistol caliber carbines are mostly used with suppressors
- (silencers??)
- (that suppressor being added requires an additional ATF form and $200 tax stamp and approval)
- where the smaller pistol calibers, and 8"-12" barrels,
- make a great deal of sense,
- is with the suppressor use.
- because they are designed and used at under 100 yards,
- to take out sentries with greatly reduced noise in the military use.
- Id bet most of us, if given a choice in a potential personal defensive, combat scenario,
- would step up to an intermediate rifle caliber carbine,
- in calibers like 223/5.56 , 30 us govt carbine and 7.62/39 and similar cartridges,
- personally Id damn sure rather carry a carbine ,
- in calibers like 223/5.56 and 7.62/39 and similar cartridges,
- now semi auto carbines are available in under 16" barrel lengths,
- but if you buy one it requires a NFA $200 tax stamp and ATF approval,
- which has restrictions and can take 4-7 months for approval
- a carbine with a 16" barrel is the size of an intermediate cartridge carbine and to me it's a bad trade-off ,
- you lost potential range and power, using a pistol caliber,
- but are carrying the similar weight and size weapon.
theres always the option of a marlin 44 mag lever gun
https://gundigest.com/rifles/ar-15/s...aliber-carbine
https://www.ammoland.com/2019/08/6-r...e-makes-sense/
https://www.learnaboutguns.com/2008/...pros-and-cons/
https://thegunzone.com/best-9mm-carbines/
https://www.shootingillustrated.com/...ines-for-2019/
https://kalashnikov-usa.com/guns/kr-9-sbr/
https://kalashnikov-usa.com/guns/kr-9rifle/
https://www.atlanticfirearms.com/products/aam-rmuz-09
https://hk-usa.com/
https://www.personaldefenseworld.com...ar15-carbines/
https://www.gunbacker.com/9mm-carbines/
https://gun.deals/product/uzi-9mm-carbine-725
https://www.minutemanreview.com/best-9mm-carbine/
https://gundigest.com/rifles/7-affor...e-options-2018
http://garage.grumpysperformance.com...e-rifle.12421/
whats you thoughts?
btw Ive played with quite a few of these carbines
theres a few I like (the uzi , MP5 and AK versions)
that impressed me as a personal defensive weapon option,
and several I think are basically junk,
(yes just personal opinion, so yours may differ)
hi-point and keltec come to mind
whats your experience
#2
Between what I assume are grammatical errors and the machine gun bullet formatting, I honestly have no thread what this post is supposed to be asking, or if it’s trying to tell something instead. Needs a major overhaul.
#3
Nontypical Buck
Join Date: Nov 2014
Posts: 2,743
yeah I couldn;t really follow the point of things here
or what the question is or isn't
and I feel there are some miss leading info too in the above!
I was a class 3 dealer and sold many things as well as used many different weapons in this class
I have had customers that had paperwork go thru in under 3 weeks, and some that took over a yr
there is ZERO SET time table on when things go thru the BATF 's office and get approval or denial!
there are also what is called short barreled rifles that are also in the category of a class 3 item, requiring special paper work
and it an be confusing to some LAW enforcement officers that find folks with PISTOL classified like items!
it can even be illegal to posses some certain items at the same time without proper paperwork!
and just to add, smaller pistols/carbines in semi or full auto, DON"T need or require a suppressor to be used well
but adding one, many times does add some balance to them, that seem to help many shoot them better!, or been my experience!
then again, MOST folks seem to shoot many things with suppressors better, due to less noise, and its even been proven, that using a suppressor one many rifles, ADD"S to the accuracy of the rifle!
so one can legally own a rifle caliber pistol in a semi auto, and where legal , also a short barrel rifle in pistol calibers
all comes down to spec's on things and wording and designs and location!
there are and always will be pro's and con's to "X" caliber being used for protection and or other things
its like many things in life anymore, OPTIONS< and what YOU like best, and using it, and what others like best, let them use it!
odds are, most folks will NEVER need to find out what works best or not in a REAL situation
and like most things, , shop placement matters more than caliber or weapon used in MOST cases!
or what the question is or isn't
and I feel there are some miss leading info too in the above!
I was a class 3 dealer and sold many things as well as used many different weapons in this class
I have had customers that had paperwork go thru in under 3 weeks, and some that took over a yr
there is ZERO SET time table on when things go thru the BATF 's office and get approval or denial!
there are also what is called short barreled rifles that are also in the category of a class 3 item, requiring special paper work
and it an be confusing to some LAW enforcement officers that find folks with PISTOL classified like items!
it can even be illegal to posses some certain items at the same time without proper paperwork!
and just to add, smaller pistols/carbines in semi or full auto, DON"T need or require a suppressor to be used well
but adding one, many times does add some balance to them, that seem to help many shoot them better!, or been my experience!
then again, MOST folks seem to shoot many things with suppressors better, due to less noise, and its even been proven, that using a suppressor one many rifles, ADD"S to the accuracy of the rifle!
so one can legally own a rifle caliber pistol in a semi auto, and where legal , also a short barrel rifle in pistol calibers
all comes down to spec's on things and wording and designs and location!
there are and always will be pro's and con's to "X" caliber being used for protection and or other things
its like many things in life anymore, OPTIONS< and what YOU like best, and using it, and what others like best, let them use it!
odds are, most folks will NEVER need to find out what works best or not in a REAL situation
and like most things, , shop placement matters more than caliber or weapon used in MOST cases!
#5
You must be trying to start a discussion on pistol caliber carbines. Can't really tell with your formatting but I'll join in.
All my kids learned to shoot with a .357 levergun. It's very easy to shoot. The amount of plinking I've done with it has made a better shooter. I've taken several whitetail deer with it. Those are the reason I like a pistol caliber carbine. Personally I'm not interested in a magazine fed 9mm, 10mm, or 40 S&W. Got a 5.56 and a .450 bushmaster AR-15s for semi-auto rifles.
All my kids learned to shoot with a .357 levergun. It's very easy to shoot. The amount of plinking I've done with it has made a better shooter. I've taken several whitetail deer with it. Those are the reason I like a pistol caliber carbine. Personally I'm not interested in a magazine fed 9mm, 10mm, or 40 S&W. Got a 5.56 and a .450 bushmaster AR-15s for semi-auto rifles.
#6
I’m not certain the point of the massive dump of links, and of course, the bullet point line break is terrible distracting, further breaking already broken English.
But it seems unfortunate have such a massive wall of text regarding pistol cartridge carbines, but fail to reference the common models of PCC’s on the market today, focusing only on relatively military only arms, and then blending (a segway as subtle as a freight train) right after into leverguns...
The Ruger PC Carbine (recently re-released), Beretta CX4 Storm, CZ Scorpion, High Point 995, Kel-tec Sub-2000... all far more common in the PCC market than anything but the AR9 listed above.
And I have to say, the woefully contrived Hollywood-esque claim that suppressed PCC’s are “designed to take out sentries” in military application could not be further from the truth. Military application of pistol cartridge sub-machine guns has been very well defined, and the driving influence certainly has never been this scenario described as their main purpose - straight out of a bad action movie.
But it seems unfortunate have such a massive wall of text regarding pistol cartridge carbines, but fail to reference the common models of PCC’s on the market today, focusing only on relatively military only arms, and then blending (a segway as subtle as a freight train) right after into leverguns...
The Ruger PC Carbine (recently re-released), Beretta CX4 Storm, CZ Scorpion, High Point 995, Kel-tec Sub-2000... all far more common in the PCC market than anything but the AR9 listed above.
And I have to say, the woefully contrived Hollywood-esque claim that suppressed PCC’s are “designed to take out sentries” in military application could not be further from the truth. Military application of pistol cartridge sub-machine guns has been very well defined, and the driving influence certainly has never been this scenario described as their main purpose - straight out of a bad action movie.
#7
I used to carry a 30 cal carbine as a car gun when I was still in the field working, I wish I still had it.
#8
I had a HiPoint in 9mm that I sold to my cousin. And more recently I purchased a Chiappa M-1 carbine in 9mm (uses Beretta mags) that is a ton of fun to shoot. I have other pistol caliber rifles. One is a Marlin 1894 in .357 mag.and the other is a Rossi in .44 mag (I forget the model but it looks like a Win '92).
I believe Hardcast just wants to put something on this forum that seems to be slowing down a lot. And he does seem to heavily weigh down his post with pics. But that's ok as long as the moderators don't care.
I believe Hardcast just wants to put something on this forum that seems to be slowing down a lot. And he does seem to heavily weigh down his post with pics. But that's ok as long as the moderators don't care.
Last edited by bronko22000; 04-06-2020 at 05:56 AM.
#9
Giant Nontypical
Join Date: Oct 2013
Posts: 9,230
South Korea wanted to return thousands of M1s in 30 Carbine back when OBozo was in office. Normally these would go through the CMP for civilian purchase. OBozo refused to allow them into the nation and they were cut into scrap. CMP hasn't had any except for special auction listing for some time. May need to just bite the bullet and order a new one. Springfield and a few other makers still make them but they are pricey. I'd rather have one of the old military issue just because of the history behind them.