Ammunition
and Guns used:
CALIBER
|
.45
|
.40
|
9x19mm
|
9x19mm
|
9x19mm
|
Type |
|
|
|
|
FMJ
Nontox
|
Make |
Federal
|
Federal
|
Federal
|
Fiocchi
|
S&B
|
Weight
grains |
200
|
165
|
124
|
93
|
124
|
Weight
grams |
13
|
11
|
8
|
6
|
8
|
Barrel
Lenghth |
5"
|
4"
|
4"
|
4"
|
4"
|
Gun |
1911
A1
|
Glock
23
|
Glock
19
|
Glock
19
|
Glock
19
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
SPEED |
|
|
|
|
|
V (3m) average
ft/sec |
996
|
944
|
1104
|
1260
|
1103
|
Factory
data ft/sec |
1030
|
1050
|
1120
|
|
|
V (3m)
average m/sec |
327
|
310
|
362
|
413
|
362
|
Factory
data m/sec |
|
|
415
|
|
|
V (3m) average
km/h |
1176
|
1115
|
1304
|
1488
|
1303
|
Mach (1228
km/h) |
0,96
|
0,91
|
1,06
|
1,21
|
1,06
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
ENERGY
|
|
|
|
|
|
measured
joule |
694
|
528
|
525
|
513
|
524
|
measured
ft/# |
512
|
389
|
387
|
378
|
386
|
Factory
data |
|
|
|
|
|
Joule
|
637
|
549
|
468
|
517
|
|
ft/pundals
|
470
|
405
|
345
|
381
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
IPSC-Factor |
199
|
156
|
137
|
117
|
137
|
The
competitors (after what we did to the poor little bullets)

The EMB-Family,
one bullet, different behavoir:

The 9x19mm
EFMJ representing the EFMJ-Family, three calibers, same behavoir:

Test
One: Leather, cotton and denim over wetpack
With this test
we wanted to find out, whether the EMB would still expand in a soft target
after penetrating:
- a motorcyclist's kidney-belt (leather and lining)
- a jeans leg (two layers of denim)
- a cotton sweater (two layers of cotton)
We repeated
this test with clay instead of the wetpacks, see below "Test Eight"
First
Couple: 9x19mm EMB (left) and 9x19mm EFMJ (right)
we also tested the .45 EFMJ against the .40 EFMJ the results
are in the DATA
SHEET.
entering
the wetpack after the heavy clothing:

entering
the second phonebook:

exiting
the second phonebook:

The EFMJ
stops after 15cm (5,91"):

The EMB
stops after tumbling and a 180° turn at 18,5cm (7,28"):
Here they
are:
The EMB tumbled and expanded to 12mm (0,47")
The EFMJ stayed in line and expanded to 14,5mm (0,57")

Test
Two: long clay blocks packed in plastic
With this test
we wanted to find out, what cavities the bullets produce. After we tested
with short clay blocks (see below) and lost two of four bullets due to
overpenetration. We decided to let the .45 EFMJ and the 9x19mm EFMJ compete
in long clay blocks. Both bullets performed very well, but the results
twisted our expectations: The .45 penetrated a little deeper than the
9x19 (.45: 28cm/11,02"; 9x19: 26cm/10,24"). The 9x19mm tore
the wider cavity into the block (9x19mm: 19cm/7,48"; .45: 16cm/6,30").
The fact, that the .45 expanded more than the 9x19mm seemed not to be
an advantage for the .45 (.45: 24mm/0,94"; 9x19: 20mm/0,79").
After being shot at, the clay blocks were not touched. We only turned
them around before we photographed them, but we especially not cut them
open etc. The blocks were ripped apart like that by the bullets alone.
Here's the
.45 EFMJ:
- Cavity (largest diameter): 16cm/6,30"
- Expansion: 24mm/0,94"
- Penetration: 28cm/11,02"

Here's the
9x19mm:
- Cavity (largest diameter): 19cm/7,48"
- Expansion: 20mm/0,79"
- Penetration: 26cm/10,24"

Test
Three: short clay blocks packed in plastic
We thought
half a clay block would be enough, but were wrong since all 9x19, .40
and .45 bullets overpenetrated the short blocks. Only the .22 could be
recovered, still the pictures are worth seeing:
Here's the
9x19mm EMB:

Here's the
9x19mm EFMJ:

Here's the
.45 EFMJ:

Here's the
.40 EFMJ:

.45 EFMJ
and .40 EFMJ side by side:

Last,
least and still nice: The .22 Stinger:
This
was the only clay block we had to cut open. The .22 seemed to only have
blown up the block a little. It did not rip it open like the .45, .40
amd 9x19mm bullets all did. But after we cut the block shot with the .22
with a wire we found a nice little cavity:

...and
here's the nasty little .22 bullet we also wouldn't want to catch:

Test
Four: Three 2mm aluminum plates in one pack = 6mm aluminium:
To
our surpise none of the bullets tested made it and penetrated all three
plates. For the fun of it we then also tried a 9x19mm IPSC-Major Handload
with 124gr and 1400 ft/sec wich went through all three plates (pretty
scary).
All EFMJ bullets just bounced offm leaving an "F" imprint on
the plate. The "F" on the bullet's nose worked like a stamp.
Even the well-penetrating EMB and FL bullets didn't make all three. The
EMB penetrated the first plate and stuck (nice pic below). The FL penetrated
two plates and stuck in the thrid one.


In this
test the 9x19mm EMB wins in the "most beautifully stuck"-category:

Test
Five: 2mm aluminum and three 20mm coated chipboards:
The
next setup was one plate of 2mm aluminium and four coated 20mm chipboards.
All loads penetrated the 2mm aluminuium plate. All EFMJs (.45; .40; 9x19)
stuck in the first chipboard and punced a little into the second one.
The EMB stuck in the third cipboard and peeked out it's backside a little
(one more nice pic below). The FL penetrated everything just like the
9x19mm IPSC-Major load did:






Test
Six: 2mm aluminum and a wetpack:
The
title says all. The 9x19mm EMB did exactly as designed. It closed and
penetrated the most (19cm/7,48"), ie 4x as deep as the .40 EFMJ)
without any expansion but with heavy tumbling in the wetpack.
Even the 9x19mm FMJ and the 9x19mm FL expanded a little to 9,5mm.
The EFMJ bullets all exanded well (.45: 24,5mm/0,96"; .40:
20mm/0,79"; 9x19mm: 13mm/0,51"). The EFMJ's penetration
was similar with .45: 6,0cm/2,36";
.40: 4,5cm/1,77"
and 9x19: 5,0cm/1,97":


Test
Seven: 20mm coated chipboard and a wetpack:
Again
the title says all.
EFMJs: Here the .45 expanded the least, the .40 the most and the 9x19
was close to the .40.
We also tested a .22 stinger for with this setup and one shouldn't underestimate
this nasty little gun.
The 9x19mm EMB closed after the hard target penetrated far more than the
others again and tumbled again.
Here's the data:
CALIBER
|
.45
|
.40
|
9x19mm
|
9x19mm
|
.22
|
Type |
EMFJ
|
EMFJ
|
EMFJ
|
EMB
|
Stinger
|
Make |
Federal
|
Federal
|
Federal
|
Fiocchi
|
|
Penetration,
wetpack, cm |
7,50
|
5,00
|
6,00
|
19,00
|
5,00
|
(inches)
|
2,95
|
1,97
|
2,36
|
7,48
|
1,97
|
Expansion,
mm |
18,00
|
21,00
|
18,50
|
9,00
|
9,50
|
(inches)
|
0,71
|
0,83
|
0,73
|
0,35
|
0,37
|
Shockwave
diameter, cm |
5,00
|
4,00
|
4,00
|
3,00
|
1,00
|
(inches)
|
1,97
|
1,57
|
1,57
|
1,18
|
0,39
|
Test
Eight: Leather, cotton and denim over wetpack
...was
a repetition of "Test One" (above) with clay instead of wetpacks.
With this test we wanted to find out, whether the Fiocchi EMB would still
expand in a soft target after penetrating:
- a motorcyclist's kidney-belt (leather and lining)
- a jeans leg (two layers of denim)
- a cotton
sweater (two layers of cotton)
and how the
9x19mm Federal EFMJ and Fiocchi FL and S&B FMJ would behave in the
same setup.
Here's the
result in numbers:
CALIBER
|
9x19mm
|
9x19mm
|
9x19mm
|
9x19mm
|
Type |
EMFJ
Test 1
|
EMFJ
Test 2
|
EMB
Test 1
|
EMB
Test 2
|
Make |
Federal
|
Federal
|
Fiocchi
|
Fiocchi
|
Cavity width
x heigth in cm |
9
x 6,5
|
6
x 6
|
7
x 8,7
|
12
x 12
and 15 cm deep
|
(inches)
|
3,54 x 2,56
|
2,36 x 2,36
|
2,76 x 3,30
|
4,72 x 4,72
and 5,91" deep
|
Penetration
in cm |
21
|
24
|
20
|
24
|
(inches)
|
8,27
|
9,45
|
7,87
|
0,73
|
Bullet expansion
in mm |
lost
in clay!?
|
17,5
|
15,5
|
16
|
(inches)
|
-
|
0,69
|
0,61
|
0,63
|
CALIBER
|
9x19mm
|
9x19mm
|
Type |
FL
|
FMJ
124gr
|
Make |
Fiocchi
|
S&B
Nontox
|
Cavity with
x heigth in cm |
7,5
x 7,5
|
8 x
8 and
14 cm deep
|
(inches)
|
2,95 x 2,95
|
3,15 x 3,15 and
6,51 deep
|
Penetration
in cm |
trough
|
9,00
|
(inches)
|
0,73
|
0,35
|
Bullet expansion
in mm |
lost
|
9 (no
expan.)
|
(inches)
|
-
|
3,54 (no expan.)
|
Here's the
setup:
The clay blocks were approx 17cm (6,7") wide.

The clay blocks
were approx 45cm (17,7") long.

and the entering
side was covered with:
- a motorcyclist's kidney-belt (leather and lining)
- a jeans leg (two layers of denim)
- a cotton
sweater (two layers of cotton)

The Fiocchi
EMB's performance:
The
EMB tore the clothing deep into the ballistic channel (as did the EFMJ).
We were suprised by both the width and depth of the cavity the EMB tore
into the clay. The bullet opened perfectly despite going through the heavy
clothing:

Here's the
perfectly expanded bullet. It expanded to 16mm (0,63")

The Federal
EFMJ's performance:
We shot the EFMJ twice into the same setup. The first time we cut the
clay breadthways:

The second
time we cut the clay lengthwise. It seemed that the bullet went through
the clothing without any expansion and then rapidly expanded after a few
centimeters of clay. It also seemed that the EFMJ bullet transferred most
of its energy at once after approximately 10cm (4") of clay ripping
a wide but short cavity into the clay.


The Fiocchi
FL's performance:
This
was kind of scary. The FL bullet ripped an extremely long and very constant
quite wide cavity into the clay. It also overpenetrated the entire 45cm
(17,7") clay block and could not be recovered.


The S&B
FMJ 124gr Nontox performance:

Suprisingly
also the FMJ bullet did quite similar to the EFMJ bullet. It ripped a
significantly wide and deep cavity into the clay. It overpenetrated but
could be recovered since it dropped to the ground and did not enter the
backstop behind the test setting (the FL even penetrated the backstop
after all the clay).
Conclusion:
I
know that also these tests leave plenty room for discussion. Still: I
see arguments to carry a .45 and arguments to carry a 9x19mm. What totally
suprised all of us is that the .40 did not convince in any setup.
The EMB seems to be very close to perfect. It expands perfectly in clay
and penetrates perfectly in and after hard targets. And heavy clothing
doesn't prevent the EMB from expanding therefter at all.
|