Depends on the weight of the respective guns, and how the cartridge for each is loaded. A very light weight .357 with a very hot load will recoil more than a heavy framed .45 with a mild load. A compact .45 with hot loads will recoil MUCH more than a heavy, long barreled .357 with mild loads. An AVERAGE 4 inch .357 with AVERAGE 125 gr loads will recoil a bit less than a standard 1911 with 230 grain ball loads.
.357 Magnum will have more recoil.
.357 Magnum. You can tell just by the recoil of the firearm.
How much more does a 30 caliber revolver recoil than a 9mm?Thanks
The Desert Eagle fires cartridges intended for revolvers.. it's not like the Auto Mag, where a special rimless version of the .44 Magnum was made exclusively for that pistol. With the Desert Eagles, the recoil is comparable... although you have a lot of weight to reduce the recoil, you also have a very heavy slide cycling as the pistol is fired.
as a VERB: This gun will recoil a lot. or: He recoiled at the awful sight of the wrecked car. as a NOUN: This gun has a lot of recoil. The recoil of a .338 magnum rifle is uncomfortable.
Depends on the load.
More than a 22, less than a 357
32, 38, 41, 45
That's more of a revolver technique.
I recommend a 9mm. Glock or Springfield Armory= Most value for your money, largest magazine capacity and lightest recoil. A revolver of any manufacturer is going to have added recoil far less capacity and more time consuming to reload. Revolvers are highly inaccurate as well. A revolver has no spring or slide to absorb any recoil so in turn when you shoot a revolver the gun will jump upwards and it will take you longer to get your target back in your sights.
Yes, the S&W model 29 is an "N frame" (large) .44 caliber magnum revolver with a 6 round capacity. It is available in a variety of barrel lengths from too short up to 8 3/8 inches long. The model 629 is the same revolver in stainless steel. To avoid the substantial recoil of the .44 magnum many shooters use the .44 special ammo instead for more pleasurable target shooting.
Yes! A standard single action revolver can malfunction in full-auto mode. The conditions are that there has to be a lot of end shake in the cylinder and you need to be using a magnum cartridge. When the revolver is fired the first time, the cylinder is thrown back with enough force (due to the excessive end shake) to move the hammer enough to index the cylinder and allow the hammer to fall on the next chamber and refire. This would continue until all cartridges are expended. If non-magnum cartridges are used, there would not be enough force in the cylinder recoil to cause this to happen. A properly set up revolver would also not do this. The Mateba Model 6 Unica is sometimes mistakenly referred to as an auto-revolver. It is actually a semi-auto revolver. DA for the first shot and SA for the remaining shots. It CANNOT fire full auto.