First firearm recommendations?
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Help me out here - your statement that 9mm is a practice round is based on your experience as a PAL RPAL owner/shooter for how long? May 2017?Mark Carney is Justin Trudeau 2 - only smarter and more dangerous.Comment
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Member of CWTF, NDA, CSSA, OFAH
I am a reloader, because I like the freedom to shoot without limits.
all I gotta do is load MOAR!!!!!Comment
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I have. I own and shoot a few handguns in real life - not first person shooter games -
9 mm Luger, 40 S&W. 22lr, 380 ACP, and 45 ACP. I may have a tad more hands on experience than May 2017 (June 1978), and would not be so eager to make a nonsense blanket statement about a specific calibre being suited only for target practice, especially when the Beretta M9 in 9 mm Parabellum was the designated sidearm of the US Military for over 30 years, and was recently replaced by a modular sidearm in 3 caliber, non of which was 45 ACP.
So for my 2 cents, for the OP, 22 lr is a good starting point, see if you can handle some different guns that feel right for you, take everything here with a grain of salt, sift through some of the good advice others have posted above, and buy the one that fits and feels right. Start smaller, avoid developing a flinch by choosing too large a calibre at first and above all have fun experiences. Proper technique and regular practice outweighs caliber.
Going out to shoot a few magazines now. Don't own any "clips".Mark Carney is Justin Trudeau 2 - only smarter and more dangerous.Comment
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Thanks for the opinion. I'm only looking at .22's right now and actually settled on a Savage Mk 2 G as the wood stock felt much more natural then the synthetic. The price was also better. In the future I'll look into the Mosin. A 7.62 is a few pennies more to shoot but it looks like a beautiful rifle.if someone drives by and you're in your underwear, beating a porcupine to death and laughing hysterically, it might be bad for business.Comment
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