121 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
121 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
THE FBI'S 10MM PISTOL
|
||
By JOHN C. HALL
|
||
Special Agent/Unit Chief
|
||
Firearms Training Unit
|
||
FBI Academy
|
||
Quantico, VA
|
||
|
||
November 1989
|
||
|
||
For several decades, FBI Agents carried the .38 caliber revolver
|
||
as a standard firearm. Now, after extensive testing and
|
||
evaluation, the FBI is converting to a new semiautomatic pistol.
|
||
The new pistol, built to FBI specifications and chambered for a
|
||
new cartridge©©the 10mm, will be issued to all FBI Agents to
|
||
replace existing revolvers. This article describes the process
|
||
that led to this decision.
|
||
|
||
BACKGROUND
|
||
|
||
The authority for FBI Agents to carry firearms was first granted
|
||
in 1934. Although pistols were sometimes issued or permitted on
|
||
a limited basis, the revolver predominated as the FBI sidearm.
|
||
The first significant shift occurred in 1981, when Special
|
||
Weapons and Tactics (SWAT) teams were equipped with large
|
||
capacity 9mm pistols. Since then, 9mm pistols have also become
|
||
the issue weapons for the FBI's Hostage Rescue Team (HRT) and
|
||
special surveillance teams.
|
||
|
||
For the general Agent population, however, revolvers remained
|
||
the issue weapon, though the increasing use of pistols reflected
|
||
a growing recognition that the modern pistol provides certain
|
||
advantages over the revolver. Primarily, pistols are generally
|
||
more compact and portable and provide a larger ammunition
|
||
capacity. They are also quicker and easier to reload.
|
||
Moreover, experience has shown that pistols are generally easier
|
||
to shoot quickly and accurately due to the self©cocking operation
|
||
of the slide following each shot and the more efficient
|
||
transmission of recoil. What is most important, however, is that
|
||
pistols have proven to be durable and reliable.
|
||
|
||
Undoubtedly, interest in pistols intensified when innovative
|
||
designs of the weapon began to appear on the market during the
|
||
early 1980s. Whereas the basic revolver design remains much as
|
||
it was at the turn of the century, the pistol has been virtually
|
||
refashioned in recent years, providing a wide range of such
|
||
innovative features as double©stacked large capacity magazines,
|
||
double©action triggers, ambidextrous controls, multiple safety
|
||
devices, and endless varieties of shapes and sizes.
|
||
|
||
Meanwhile, other events entered into the picture. Instances
|
||
where law enforcement officers were confronting more violent,
|
||
heavily armed subjects appeared to be on the rise. Theincreasing
|
||
use of semiautomatic and even fully automatic weapons
|
||
by certain segments of the criminal element began to raise
|
||
concerns about the adequacy of law enforcement armament.
|
||
|
||
SELECTION OF A NEW HANDGUN
|
||
|
||
In 1987, new impetus was given to the FBI's ongoing evaluation of
|
||
firearms and ammunition. The Firearms Training Unit, located at
|
||
the FBI Academy in Quantico, VA, set out to identify the best
|
||
possible handgun for FBI Agents. Firearms training experts
|
||
undertook a major testing project to evaluate a variety of 9mm
|
||
and .45 caliber pistols then on the market. While several of the
|
||
pistols tested were effective, none possessed all of the features
|
||
desired in a general issue FBI weapon. The challenge was to
|
||
develop a pistol that met the needs of the FBI. In the
|
||
meantime, as a response to a growing perception within Agent
|
||
ranks that a pistol was preferable to the revolver, the Director
|
||
of the FBI authorized Agents to use personally owned pistols,
|
||
either 9mm or .45 caliber, as long as the weapons were of
|
||
approved manufacture and design and the training and
|
||
qualification standards were met.
|
||
|
||
A Question of Caliber
|
||
|
||
The most critical, and controversial, issue relating to the
|
||
selection of a new FBI handgun was that of caliber. Questions
|
||
have been raised not only about the adequacy of some weapons but
|
||
also about the wounding effectiveness of some ammunition. Case
|
||
accounts of shootings document the fact that subjects receiving
|
||
fatal, but not incapacitating, wounds have been able to return
|
||
fire and inflict further damage.
|
||
|
||
Wound Ballistics
|
||
|
||
As a means of resolving the problem, the FBI convened a Wound
|
||
Ballistics Seminar at the FBI Academy in September 1987. The
|
||
participants included noted individuals from the scientific and
|
||
medical communities from throughout the Nation who possessed
|
||
relevant expertise in the field of wound ballistics. One of the
|
||
primary purposes of the seminar was to identify the performance
|
||
criteria of a bullet most likely to inflict an incapacitating
|
||
wound on a human target.
|
||
|
||
A second purpose of the seminar was to determine, if possible,
|
||
which of the two calibers, the 9mm or the .45, was likely to be
|
||
most effective in accomplishing that goal. And, although the
|
||
seminar was unsuccessful in conclusively resolving the caliber
|
||
question, it did identify the desirable performance criteria of
|
||
an effective bullet.
|
||
|
||
Incapacitation, in the law enforcement context, may be simply
|
||
described as bringing about the immediate cessation of hostile or
|
||
threatening activities. Incapacitation may result from
|
||
psychological or physiological factors. Psychologically, some
|
||
individuals are predisposed to fall down at the sound of gunfire,
|
||
while others may continue to fight even though they are
|
||
seriously-©even fatally-©wounded. Because a particular person's
|
||
psychological response to a gunshot wound cannot be predicted,
|
||
ammunition performance must be viewed from the perspective of
|
||
physiological incapacitation.
|
||
|
||
The seminar participants unanimously concluded that
|
||
physiological incapacitation can be accomplished in one of two
|
||
ways©©damage to the central nervous system (the brain or upper
|
||
spinal column) or significant loss of blood. Because the
|
||
placement of a shot in the relatively small, highly mobile target
|
||
area of the brain cannot be counted upon in an armed
|
||
confrontation, a bullet must therefore be capable of penetrating
|
||
the body sufficiently to pass through major arteries and blood-
|
||
bearing organs to ensure timely physiological incapacitation.
|
||
Without adequate penetration, physiological incapacitation cannot
|
||
be attained. Given adequate penetration, the only reliable way
|
||
to increase the effectiveness of the wound is to increase its
|
||
size, thus increasing the amount of tissue damage and the rate of
|
||
hemorrhage. Thus, the FBI's test program was designed to
|
||
evaluate bullet penetration and wound size.
|
||
|
||
Ammunition Test Design
|
||
|
||
With the performance criteria acquired from the Wound Ballistics
|
||
Seminar, the next step was to design and construct a series of
|
||
ammunition tests to measure the performance of different rounds
|
||
against those standards. For that purpose, the Firearms Training
|
||
Unit established a working group which included personnel from
|
||
the Special Operations and Research Unit, the Hostage Rescue
|
||
Team, and the Institutional Research and Development Unit.
|
||
|
||
The tests were designed to simulate factors realistically.
|
||
Therefore, if the effects of bullets upon human tissue were to be
|
||
realistically measured, a substance that would duplicate human
|
||
tissue was needed. Based upon the research of Dr. Martin
|
||
Fackler, Director of the Army's Wound Ballistics Laboratory, at
|
||
the Letterman Institute in San Francisco, 10% ballistic gelatin
|
||
was selected to simulate soft human muscle tissue. Eight
|
||
separate penetration tests were conducted by firing bullets into
|
||
this substance.
|
||
|
||
Also, since experience demonstrated that bare tissue is seldom
|
||
visible on a target in a violent confrontation, seven of the
|
||
eight tests included covering the gelatin with typical clothing
|
||
material (cotton T©shirt material, flannel shirt material, 10
|
||
oz. down in a nylon carrier, and denim). To assure validity and
|
||
standardization, clothing manufacturers were consulted to
|
||
determine the average thread count in typical underclothing,
|
||
shirts, and jackets.
|
||
|
||
Other factors were then considered. Because FBI Agents
|
||
frequently confront subjects in vehicles, behind doors or walls,
|
||
and at various distances, clothed gelatin was placed behind
|
||
windshield glass, car door metal, plaster board and plywood.
|
||
Again, manufacturers in the construction and automobile
|
||
industries were consulted to assure that the materials used
|
||
replicated substances that bullets would have to pass through in
|
||
real©life situations. While most of the test shots were fired
|
||
from a distance of 10 feet, some of the tests were conducted at
|
||
20 yards to assess the effects of distance and velocity loss on
|
||
penetration potential.
|
||
|
||
Five shots were fired in each of the 8 penetration tests,
|
||
providing a total of 40 shots for each caliber or bullet type
|
||
tested.
|
||
|
||
The Competing Calibers
|
||
|
||
Once the tests were designed, a decision had to be made
|
||
regarding the calibers to be tested. In pistol cartridges, the
|
||
two most obvious contenders were the 9mm and .45. The 9mm round
|
||
tested was the 147 grain subsonic hollow point round produced by
|
||
Winchester; the .45 round selected for the test was the Remington
|
||
185 grain hollow point. The selection of these particular
|
||
cartridges for testing was based, in large part, on the consensus
|
||
of the Wound Ballistic Workshop participants that these bullets
|
||
should provide superior penetration over other hollow point
|
||
bullets in their respective calibers.
|
||
|
||
In the meantime, a separate research and development project had
|
||
been undertaken with the 10mm cartridge to assess its
|
||
application to law enforcement work. Although the 10mm (.40
|
||
caliber) is a relatively new cartridge, with few weapons
|
||
presently chambered for it, its unique position halfway in size
|
||
between the 9mm (.35 caliber) and the .45 appeared to offer the
|
||
possibility of a third viable law enforcement pistol cartridge.
|
||
In addition, unlike its other competitors, the potential of the
|
||
new cartridge was virtually untapped.
|
||
|
||
Samples of commercially available 10mm ammunition were acquired
|
||
and preliminarily evaluated as to suitability for law
|
||
enforcement use. The high chamber pressures generated by the
|
||
commercial loadings, with the resultant heavy recoil and muzzle
|
||
blast, tended to offset the otherwise excellent performance of
|
||
the round. Therefore, the FBI Firearms Training Unit decided to
|
||
create a new loading for the 10mm, one with velocities comparable
|
||
to those of the competing 9mm and .45 cartridges. A 180 grain
|
||
hollow point bullet was acquired and handloaded to a velocity of
|
||
950 feet per second. This loading not only matched the
|
||
velocities of the other two cartridges, but it also dramatically
|
||
reduced recoil and muzzle blast.
|
||
|
||
In the absence of factory ammunition built to the desired
|
||
specifications, the 10mm rounds initially subjected to the test
|
||
protocol were those handloaded by the Firearms Training Unit
|
||
staff. Subsequently, factory©loaded 10mm ammunition was acquired
|
||
and built to the desired specifications, which actually met or
|
||
surpassed the performance of the handloaded test ammunition.
|
||
|
||
The Test Procedures
|
||
|
||
Because the objective was to test ammunition and not weapons, the
|
||
initial tests were conducted with industry standard test barrels.
|
||
These barrels are built to standards established by the Sporting
|
||
Arms and Ammunition Manufacturing Institute (SAAMI) and are
|
||
tailored to optimize the ballistic efficiency of each caliber.
|
||
Test barrel length is determined by the internal ballistics of
|
||
the caliber. Consequently, the barrel lengths vary with each
|
||
caliber. For example, the optimal test barrel for the 9mm is 4"
|
||
in length, while those of the 10mm and .45 are 6".
|
||
|
||
The immediate concern was the possibility that the longer test
|
||
barrels for the 10mm and .45 would provide an advantage by
|
||
increasing their velocities. In reality, it was discovered that
|
||
increased velocity actually diminishes the penetration
|
||
performance of hollow point bullets in gelatin by increasing the
|
||
rate and degree of expansion. It was noted, for example, that
|
||
both the 10mm and .45 achieved lower velocities, but greater
|
||
penetration, when fired from shorter pistol barrels than when
|
||
fired from the longer test barrels with somewhat higher
|
||
velocities. Thus, the longer test barrels used with the 10mm and
|
||
.45 worked as a handicap for those two calibers by lessening the
|
||
degree of penetration. That handicap would have been eliminated
|
||
by using test barrels of equal lengths, and the disparity between
|
||
the penetration performance of the 9mm and the two other calibers
|
||
would have been even greater than that actually attained. Since
|
||
the longer test barrels were not giving any advantage to the 10mm
|
||
and the .45 caliber (quite the contrary), the tests were
|
||
continued with existing equipment.
|
||
|
||
After initial tests to measure velocity and accuracy, 40 rounds
|
||
of each caliber were fired by FBI firearms personnel to measure
|
||
penetration and wound volume. Following each shot, red dye was
|
||
injected into the wound channel created by the passage of the
|
||
bullet into the gelatin, and a photograph was taken. Then a
|
||
separate team from the Institutional Research and Development
|
||
Unit conducted the measurements to ascertain penetration
|
||
(measured in inches), bullet expansion, and retained bullet
|
||
weight. Finally, the volume of tissue displaced (wound size) by
|
||
the passage of the bullet was computed in cubic inches and
|
||
recorded.
|
||
|
||
The Results
|
||
|
||
Although penetration and wound size govern handgun wounding
|
||
effectiveness, penetration is the more critical element.
|
||
Therefore, a minimum standard of 12" of penetration in the
|
||
gelatin was established. The following penetration results
|
||
indicate the number and percentage of rounds in each caliber that
|
||
met or exceeded the 12" minimum:
|
||
|
||
10mm - 39 shots out of 40 (97.5%)
|
||
.45 - 37 shots out of 40 (92.5%)
|
||
9mm - 27 shots out of 40 (67.5%)
|
||
|
||
As a point of reference, the standard issue .38 Special, 158
|
||
grain lead hollowpoint round was fired through the battery of
|
||
tests. Although the .38 was not a "test" round, and therefore
|
||
not fired under the same strict test controls, the penetration
|
||
performance was similar to that of the 9mm, producing acceptable
|
||
penetration 67.5% of the time.
|
||
|
||
It should be noted that no maximum penetration standard was
|
||
established. This reflects the judgment that underpenetration of
|
||
a handgun bullet presents a far greater risk to the law
|
||
enforcement officer than overpenetration does to an innocent
|
||
bystander. Considering that approximately 80% of the rounds
|
||
fired by law enforcement officers engaged in violent encounters
|
||
do not strike the intended targets, it was deemed somewhat
|
||
unrealistic to attach too much significance to the potential
|
||
risks of overpenetration on the part of those that do.
|
||
Nevertheless, in assessing the potential volume of wounds created
|
||
by the test bullets, greater attention was given to the
|
||
potential tissue displaced up to a depth of 18". For practical
|
||
purposes, penetration beyond that range would most likely carry
|
||
the bullet outside the body.
|
||
|
||
Averaging the volumetric results over all eight test events, the
|
||
10mm and .45 displaced similar volumes of tissue within the
|
||
desirable penetration range of 18"-4.11 and 4.22 cubic inches
|
||
respectively-©well beyond that displaced by the 9mm and .38-ªwhich
|
||
respectively measured 2.82 and 2.16 cubic inches.
|
||
|
||
As an additional consideration, the 10mm was by far the most
|
||
accurate round tested, consistently providing one hole 10©shot
|
||
groups at 25 yards of less than an inch (0.77" average) with
|
||
both handloaded and factory ammunition built to FBI
|
||
specifications. By contrast, the 9mm averaged 2.3" and the .45
|
||
averaged 2".
|
||
|
||
CONCLUSION
|
||
|
||
The conclusion was obvious. The best performing round within the
|
||
parameters of the FBI's test protocol was the 10mm.
|
||
Accordingly, the Director of the FBI approved the recommendation
|
||
that the new 10mm cartridge be adopted as the standard caliber
|
||
for a new FBI pistol, and that the new pistol be procured in
|
||
sufficient quantities to replace existing revolvers.
|
||
|
||
The tests that led to this decision by the FBI are available, on
|
||
request, to interested law enforcement agencies. Moreover,
|
||
ammunition testing will continue, and extend to other calibers
|
||
and bullets available for law enforcement use. As additional
|
||
test results are compiled, quarterly updates will be automatically
|
||
mailed to recipients of the original test report.
|
||
Requests for the test report entitled "Ammunition Test Results"
|
||
should be mailed to :
|
||
|
||
Firearms Training Unit
|
||
FBI Academy
|
||
Quantico, VA 22135
|
||
|
||
FBI Bullet Performance Criteria
|
||
1. PENETRATION
|
||
a. Minimum Acceptable-12
|
||
b. Maximum Desirable-18
|
||
|
||
2. SIZE OF THE WOUND (Volume)
|
||
a. Frontal Area of Bullet
|
||
b. Depth of Penetration
|
||
|
||
FBI Standardized Ammunition Tests
|
||
Test 1 - Bare Gelatin @ 10 feet
|
||
Test 2 - Heavy Clothing @ 10 feet
|
||
Test 3 - 20 gauge Steel @ 10 feet
|
||
Test 4 - Wallboard @ 10 feet
|
||
Test 5 - Plywood @ 10 feet
|
||
Test 6 - Auto Windshield Glass @ 10 feet
|
||
Test 7 - Light Clothing @ 20 yards
|
||
Test 8 - Auto Glass @ 20 yards |