Gun Digest
 

Self Defense: Do The 5.7×28, .25 ACP, .22 LR And .22 WMR Cut It?

The .25 ACP is ultra-compact, but it’s also ultra-unpowerful. Yes, it can kill, and no, I wouldn’t want to be shot with one. But that doesn’t make it a good choice for a defensive caliber.
The .25 ACP is ultra-compact, but it’s also ultra-unpowerful. Yes, it can kill, and no, I wouldn’t want to be shot with one. But that doesn’t make it a good choice for a defensive caliber.

Tempting as the convenience of mouse guns and micro pistols are, do the .25 ACP, .22 LR, .22 WMR and 5.7×28 have the stuff to save your life?

How Does Each Light Caliber Stack Up:

If you’re going to choose a light caliber for self-defense, do it right

The subject of a .22LR, .22 Magnum or .25 Auto for personal defense is controversial. They’re not stoppers. Period. End of story. However, they are still lethal weapons.

The .22LR bullet, compared to a .32 and a .380 JHP. This is not the Hammer of Thor, so don’t expect miracles.

The reason they exist is twofold: compactness and low recoil, both of which make them appeal to many as potential everyday carry guns. The smallest handgun to be had is an ultra-compact .22LR, or a .25 Auto. The lowest-recoiling handgun you can shoot is a standard-sized pistol chambered in .22LR, such as one of the smaller-sized Ruger Mk I, II, III or IV. The .25 ACP/Auto is not much different from the .22LR, with the exception that the bullet, almost always a full metal jacket, can be counted on to feed more reliably than the lead-bullet .22LR. But, that can also be a matter of maintenance (a lint-choked pistol isn’t going to feed anything reliably) and handling.

.25 ACP

I will just pass right over the .25 ACP. Despite the compactness of some of the pistols that use it, it offers nothing the .22LR doesn’t, ballistically, and does so at greater cost, less availability and fewer options for pistol choices.

The .22LR will sometimes expand, and sometimes not. The bullet on the left is a hollow-point, and you can see how much (not) it expanded. The middle one is a regular round-nose, and the loaded cartridge is to the right. The big advantage is the low cost.

.22LR

The standard .22LR offers only a straight, bullet-diameter permanent wound, with a depth of 14-15 inches. There may be some expansion with hollow-point bullets, but that comes at the expense of a couple of inches of penetration. Also, some bullets may yaw and end up stopping base-first in the wound track. When traveling sideways, it does create a marginally larger permanent wound than a simple cylinder, but that’s hardly something to boast about.

The .22LR is not a big stick when it comes to defense, but it is better than a knife or a club — especially for someone who can’t handle heavier recoil.

The .22 Magnum offers a better bullet at higher velocity, but at more cost and noise. (Recoil is still pretty minimal.)

The trick to its use in defense is to realize two points. First, you will have to depend on more than one shot. In fact, the standard response when shooting in defense with a .22LR should be to empty the magazine and immediately reload. Second, placement matters. The hits have to be high center of mass or else the effort is wasted.

This combination of needs does not make the .22LR a high-percentage option, even in the handgun realm. But, for those with no other choice, there is no other choice.

This .22 Magnum bullet started at .221 inch and expanded to .30 inch. That’s not bad.

Get More Concealed Carry Information:


.22 Magnum

Stepping up, you have the .22 Magnum, which is a longer case than the .22LR and designed to contain the bullet inside the case. The jacketed bullet offers the promise of expansion, but that’s not always the realization. You see, a .22 Magnum out of a rifle generates plenty of velocity. Out of a handgun, it’s often no faster (or not enough faster to matter) than a .22LR cartridge.

The expansion of any of these bullets is not a reliable outcome. Even if they do expand, the degree is not great. An expanding .22LR, all 40 grains of it, could bump up to .27-inch in diameter.

The 5.7×28, next to a .22 Magnum, and on the left, a .22LR.

Hornady has lead the way here, offering a defensive-use .22 Magnum loading, with a bullet designed to expand at velocities the .22 Magnum can deliver. Called their Critical Defense, it gives 9-10 inches of penetration in ballistic gelatin out of a handgun.

Speer also makes their Gold Dot line of ammunition in the .22 Magnum. If you want as much performance as you can get, in a pistol that isn’t going to kick much, then the .22 Magnum can be a good choice.

The Kel-Tec PMR-30 might not look like the Hammer of Thor, but it’s soft in recoil, it holds 30 rounds of .22 WMR, and a spare magazine gives you another 30 in a couple of seconds. Having 30 or 60 rounds of .22 WMR is very comforting for those who find recoil hard to deal with.

Combined with a handgun such as the Kel-Tec PMR-30, someone who can’t handle a larger caliber can reasonably expect a good outcome. Part of that is the improved performance of the .22 Magnum over the .22LR, and the other is capacity. A standard .22LR pistol has a 10-round magazine. The PMR-30 magazine holds 30 rounds.

Nine to 10 inches isn’t FBI-passing performance, but it also doesn’t offer anything like the recoil of an FBI-compliant load. This is part of the compromise.

The FN FiveseveN pistol holds 20 (or 30) rounds of 5.7 ammunition. It’s a bit larger in the grip than .22LR and .22 Magnum pistols would be, so if that matters, be sure and test before you buy.


5.7X28 FN

The outlier here is the FN 5.7×28 cartridge. This centerfire cartridge uses a jacketed bullet, longer than a .22LR or .22 Magnum. Out of the firearms for which it was intended it works reasonably well. That is, out of an SMG-sized firearm like the P90, with a 10.4-inch barrel, it can generate enough velocity to work. The PS90, with its 16.1-inch barrel, really delivers the goods, but that isn’t a handgun. Put into a handgun, it comes in a bit ahead of the .22 Magnum in velocity.

There’s not a lot of data for the 5.7×28. It has been adopted by some law enforcement agencies, and it has been used in shootings by them. Getting information out of those sources is difficult. The only one we have that offers a reasonable data set is the shooting at Fort Hood. There, Major Nidal Hasan fatally shot 13 people and wounded 32 more. He used an FN FiveseveN pistol and two ammo types: the FN SS192 and SS197SR. The SS192 is (or was, FN stopped making it in 2004) a jacketed hollow-point with an aluminum core. That’s not much expansion, and not armor-piercing. The SS197SR is loaded with the Hornady V-Max bullet, using a blue polymer tip to indicate a slightly higher velocity than the SS196SR.

Given the choice of something in .22, I’d opt for the 5.7×28 with FMJ ammo — and lots and lots of practice.

The ability of the rounds to stop fights was out of proportion from what one would expect with such a small cartridge. Three of the victims valiantly charged the shooter, attempting to stop him. They were shot for their efforts, were stopped and subsequently died. They charged from close range (the incident happened indoors, so there were not long distances to cover) and yet failed to close the distance due to the gunshot received.

Those wounded with hits to the extremities were unable, in many instances, to flee or fight, due to broken bones. When a “mere” .22 handgun cartridge can break a femur, there’s something going on that must be explained. That shot was received by one of the first responders, an in-base civilian security person. She took a hit to her wrist, which made that arm unable to function, and a hit to the upper leg that broke her femur.

Diagram of the permanent and temporary wound cavity left from a 37-grain .22 LR bullet moving at 1,272 fps.

The drawback to the FiveseveN approach to low-recoil defense is cost. A FiveseveN lists for around $1,180, compared to the Kel-Tec PMR-30 at $455. The FN pistol holds 20 rounds (optional extensions make it a 30-round magazine) compared to the Kel-Tec at 30 rounds standard. An FN magazine is $35, with the extension costing another $18-20, while the Kel-Tec is $31.

The 5.7×28 ammunition costs (at the moment) $28 per box of 50 rounds, while .22 Magnum can be had for as little as $10 per box of 50 practice FMJs, up to $15 for a box of Hornady Critical Defense.

The last hurdle for the 5.7×28 is size. The grip is a bit larger than that of the Kel-Tec, and even if the recoil is mild, if you (or the person you are coaching in this situation) can’t get a hand or hands around it, it isn’t a good choice.

Recommendations

If you already have a .22LR pistol and need it for defense, then use the most accurate, readily available .22LR ammunition to be found. Practice getting as many hits out of a full magazine, on a playing-card-sized target at 7 yards, as quickly as you can. Volume and accuracy need to be your focus here.

You can see the loaded .22LR, scaled up to the size of a mortar round. The priming compound in a .22LR is in the rim. This makes it inexpensive to manufacture, but it complicates magazine design for feeding.

A better choice would be either Hornady Critical Defense or Speer Gold Dot in .22 Magnum in the Kel-Tec. The PMR-30 isn’t going to cost much, if anything, more than a good .22LR pistol. Use whichever of these two loads shoots reliably and accurately out of your Kel-Tec. As with the .22LR, practice hitting a playing card at 7 yards, as quickly as possible, and train yourself to keep shooting on the target until it (he, she, they) goes down.

If you have the hands and the budget, but not the recoil resistance, for something bigger in caliber, then go for the FN FiveseveN in 5.7×28, with the 40-grain FMJ. The V-Max is accurate, but it’s designed as a varmint-level bullet. I’d be much more confident with an FMJ in this situation than with a readily expanding bullet of only 40 grains.

While the effect is likely to be better than the .22LR or the .22 Magnum, the process should be the same: playing card accuracy, 7 yards, continuous fire until the bad guy goes down.

Caveats

There will be those who want to throw me under the bus for recommending the various .22s for defense. I have attempted to be clear: A rimfire is better than anything not a firearm; and for those who cannot handle more recoil, this is perhaps the only choice. I would rather someone who needs a firearm for defense has a weak one than none at all, as long as they realize the limitations of the tool they are using.

There are no .25s I can recommend. For the cost, you can easily acquire .22LR or .22 Magnum ammo that will perform better. And since you have to depend on volume and speed of fire, the ultra-compact .25s are poor choices, as clever as some of the designs might be.

Next Step: Get your FREE Printable Target Pack

Enhance your shooting precision with our 62 MOA Targets, perfect for rifles and handguns. Crafted in collaboration with Storm Tactical for accuracy and versatility.

Subscribe to the Gun Digest email newsletter and get your downloadable target pack sent straight to your inbox. Stay updated with the latest firearms info in the industry.

Get Free Targets




Exit mobile version