Post
by timmy » Sun Oct 06, 2024 12:22 am
Chicky, don't get me wrong -- I'm only asking what experience or knowledge shapes the views you expressed. Surely, that is fair to ask?
My experience and knowledge on the matter of 30 caliber, or the 7.62x25 Tokarev cartridge, works like this: I shoot the cartridge in a Czech CZ52. I have a "Star"/Tokarev TT33 copy/Norinco, but it is chambered in 9mm. I know that 9mm roughly equals 7.62c25 in power, but it also matters what gun one shoots the cartridge in andf what load. My loads are RWS commercial and a 1200 round tin of Romanian surplus ammo, which I think was made in the 70s for submachine guns -- it is hot! When either round goes off at the range and others are around, they definately look! But, the CZ52 is very unlike shooting the Star, so there's a difference. Anyway, I don't know what ammunition you are shooting in India and how it is loaded.
The grip on the Star is small and angular, and the gun is not comfortable to shoot. I don't get a grip with my little finger, which makes a difference in controllability that someone with a different hand may not experience. The CZ52, on the other hand, has a large, hand-filling grip that's at an awkward angle.
I'm not the "man" and I'm sure some of our other members here have wider experience and more knowledge. I try my best to speak to what I know and to learn when I don't know.
My handgun experience started with shooting my Dad's Ruger semiauto 22, and also my Uncle's S&W K22 Masterpiece, which I ended up inheriting. After this, I started shooting a Ruger Old Army black powder 44 revolver, and then went to shooting a Ruger Blackhawk in 45 Colt, which I still have and shoot. After, I got other guns in 38 Special, 9mm 7.62x25, and 32 Auto. Most of this reflects the desire to shoot cast bullets.
So that's a brief rundown of my experience and perspective -- neither the "top" nor a beginner.
My perspective is that we can learn much from others, but that there are some things that we need to find out for ourselves by trying, such as what we might like or shoot well, or what we would rule out. I like to tell what I think to others who ask, but in the end, they must, or should, decide what is best for them, because nobody can really know everything about another person.
Surely it is not wrong to ask about another person's perspective, I hope.
“Fanaticism consists of redoubling your efforts when you have forgotten your aim.”
saying in the British Royal Navy