.50 Action Express, also known as 12.7x33.
It depends on the laws in your country. In the US, you can. The Desert Eagle is strictly a civilian market pistol, anyhow, with no practicality for law enforcement or military usage and since the American law does not count against high caliber bullets that a Desert Eagle can use (.357, .44, or .50 usually).
The H&K USP would be better. It was designed as a combat handgun. The Desert Eagle was designed as a hunting handgun, and cannot maintain reliability in harsh conditions, it must be kept clean. The Desert Eagle also is picky about what type of bullets you can use in it. JSP, and JHP are what it is recommended to be used with, as LRN and FMJ causes fouling .
@ 1USD a round. @.50 cents a round
None.
The Desert Eagle is capable of using either .44 or .50 caliber ammunition, although the .50 requires a barrel swap.
an m9 with a silencer and a desert eagle with an extended barrel
Moderately. Heavy handgun, significant recoil, but less than many large caliber revolvers. This also depends on what caliber round you are using. The Desert Eagle can be modified to fire several different rounds, but in this case we'll use the standard 50AE round. The recoil on this is serious so you need to be ready for the jump or it will either fly out of your hand, or kick back into your face. As always proper training and technique is key. Train hard, train often, train safe. Lance Corporal Skyler Harris MOS#0332
I'm not sure, but I think it was a Desert Eagle. It may have been a .50 AE, but Desert Eagle pistols are available in a couple of other calibers.
When you go to the black market and spin crates, sometimes you win coupons and you can use these coupons to redeem prizes like axes, bodyarmor, or the Golden Desert Eagle.
i would use a m1 carbine, ak 47 and a desert eagle
The Magnum Research Baby Desert Eagle shoots Metal BB's. It is an Air gun not Airsoft. But Magnum Research also makes a Desert Eagle ( Not Baby) that is an airsoft pistol that shoots Plastic BB's
{This depends on the local and state laws in effect where the crime occurred.}The weapon being a Desert Eagle (Magnum Research) means nothing. The fact that it is handgun does. They come in .357 Magnum, 44 Magnum and 50AE ; a 22 handgun and a 50AE handgun are the same in the eyes of the law: they are either legal or not based on the state or whether the state has a concealed carry license. There are stronger handguns that are faster to use and more powerful { 0.500 Magnum Revolver }, these are for fun: having something most people don't.There is a faulty assumption that a 'Desert Eagle' is meant for 'only killing humans' {grrrr CSI - wrong!} when in fact professional killers are most often known to use .22 up to the base of the head. The large calibers used in the Desert Eagles are too loud and unwieldy for assassin work. When fired rapidly (1 per sec) a DE is totally inaccurate and basically useless for defense. A rate of fire of 1 every 2 seconds is more controllable, but for most users 1/3 secs would allow necessary accuracy. {A bolt action rifle can be fired faster, 3 shots per every 2 secs.}A Desert Eagle costs between $900 and $2500, not something you would want taken from you for any time (as happens when a shooting event occurs, police take the gun.) The cost of using the weapon is prohibitive: about $0.30 per shot for .357, $0.45 per .44, and just under $0.70 per .50AE**. A magazine therefore would be $2.40, $3.60 and $4.90. Practice (at least 10 magazines a month) = $24.00, $36.00 and $49.00.If the 'fact' that it is for 'killing only' is misstated, it can be pointed out that a semi-automatic weapon is the same thing as a revolver with extra chambers: 7 or 8 or 10 rather than 5 or 6. The caliber means nothing - either the gun is legal or not.** From personal experience, a Desert Eagle's slide is so heavy that low cost ammunition will not cycle the action and the bullets become jammed: only premium ammunition will allow semi-automatic action.