SHOOTING
THROUGH ENGINE BLOCKS WITH A REVOLVER ?
Writing a earlier piece I
recalled a young cop quoting the engine block story – so here I go
researching the myth:
On the Guns&Ammo
Forum I found these: "Just shoot the driver and leave the car
alone – especially if its a classic."
and: "my idea of a
warning shot is when the second guy watches his first buddy go down."
quoted as from Sir George Killian.(I thought that was a Coors beer).
There's always a Joker eh (Pastafarians thank the Flying Spaghetti Monster)
The most likely origin so far is that it comes from a 1950s Dick Tracey comic strip, - or that S&W may have said that "their .357' Magnum can crack the engine block on a Mack Truck."
You see the point here is
that we are talking about a handgun – not a .50"Cal
armour piercing round from a high power sniper rifle. No handgun
round could reliably be expected to shoot through any cars bodywork,
radiator, exhaust system, various other componentry, and then pass
through a complete engine block – end of story! - And that is forgetting what kind of engine, 4 or 6 cylinder, V-8, "Detroit Iron" or modern alloy block?
- Has it stopped yet? - BONNIE & CLYDES Bullet Riddled 1934 Ford (In museum)
Of course if you hit where there is a thin cast water-jacket in either a cast iron or an alloy block, you might well crack or penetrate it – or indeed if a carburetor or distributor on an old model was hit in the right place, the engine might stop. But a lead projectile leaving a revolver or auto at around 800 – 1200 ft per sec aint going to reliably win your bet.
It's the old issue of the
movies forgetting that some things are physically impossible – so
they fake it and maybe some of the audience will of-course be fooled into
thinking it's real. Similarly the media song "Don't ruin a good story with the facts" keeps being sung.
In science there is a physical law
that reads "Every action has an equal and opposite re-action."
- This means that if an "ARE YOU FEELING LUCKY PUNK"
revolver could blow the perp off his feet backwards through a
plate-glass shop window – it would have a similar effect on the shooter holding onto the gun.
The reality is that when
our film actor fires his blank (.357") round from his .44
Magnum sized gun, the stunt-man double is jerked
backwards by ropes through a window (made of sugar) onto a heap of
cardboard boxes.
I mean, there are people
who believe in SantaClaus and the Easter Bunny too,
and maybe still go to church.
To be honest with you - although I've been shooting handguns for 25+ years I realy don't enjoy shooting real .44"Magnum ammo through a real S&W revolver - it really stings my soft hands!- One cylinder-full and I'll happily pass the artillery back to its staunch, really tough owner.
Marty K.
After researching & writing 1,036 blogs I've got something NEW to try .. I've signed-up to Patreon. - In over five years I've not made one cent from this .. NOW you can send me a wee support $ - starting from $1. to get all this stuff from New Zealand - over a year that's nearly the price of one Shooting magazine. - Am I worth it?
https://www.patreon.com/user?u=16618870
After researching & writing 1,036 blogs I've got something NEW to try .. I've signed-up to Patreon. - In over five years I've not made one cent from this .. NOW you can send me a wee support $ - starting from $1. to get all this stuff from New Zealand - over a year that's nearly the price of one Shooting magazine. - Am I worth it?
https://www.patreon.com/user?u=16618870
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