GunCritic
GunCritic

.380 Auto (9mm Browning Short) VS 7.62x25mm Tokarev

Head to Head Comparison

.380 Auto (9mm Browning Short)

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7.62x25mm Tokarev

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MSRP:

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MSRP:

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Gun Specifications

Specifications

.380 Auto (9mm Browning Short)

7.62x25mm Tokarev

Height

0.68

0.00

Average FPS

980

Average Grain

91

Average Energy

194

Recoil

0.41

0.00

Ballistic Coefficient

96.34

Gun Stats

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.380 Auto (9mm Browning Short)

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$19.99

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$18.99

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$11.71

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7.62x25mm Tokarev

Guns.com

$11.99

Firearms Depot

$0.00

Palmetto State Armory

$0.00

MidwayUSA

$7.99

Cheaper Than Dirt

$9.89

Primary Arms

$0.00

GrabAGun

$8.89

Brownells.com

$10.59

KYGUNCO

$11.99

EuroOptic.com

$0.00

Sportsman's Warehouse

$0.00

Cabela's

$0.00

Bass Pro Shops

$0.00

Academy Sports + Outdoors

$0.00

Federal Premium

$0.00

Remington

$0.00

Optics Planet

$0.00

Gun Descriptions

About The .380 ACP Ammo is a rimless, straight walled cartridge designed for pistols introduced in the year of 1908. Ever since it was released into the market, it has been very popular in the self-defense department and has been widely used in numerous handguns. The .380 ACP Ammo is considered a misnomer since it doesn't strictly conform to cartridge naming conventions that are named against the bullet's diameter. Using the standard naming process, the .380 ACP Ammo should be named .355 ACP Ammo since it uses a cartridge .355 in diameter. The .380 ACP Ammo, because of its low blow-thrust, delivered a soft recoil to the shooter. The overall length of the .380 ACP Ammo is 25mm, while the bullet diameter measures 9mm. The 45-grain variant of the .380 ACP Ammo can travel at a velocity of 1,835 feet per second while creating an energy level of 337 ft.lbf.  Manufacturer John Browning designed the .380 ACP Ammo in 1908, and Colt's Manufacturing Company manufactured it in the same year.  Uses The .380 ACP Ammo has experienced a wide array of uses over the years. At least FIVE European nations picked it up as their standard pistol ammo before World War II. The .380 ACP Ammo is light and compact and delivers a short-ranged shot, creating less stopping power. The .380 ACP Ammo remains a popular cartridge for self-defense purposes. 

Created just in time for issuance in World War II, the 7.62x25mm Tokarev cartridge is a hard-kicking handgun cartridge and also an excellent SMG cartridge. The original perception of this cartridge in the United States is that it’s a “neat Russian gun” and was “cheap to shoot”. It also turns out that the cartridge has 527 ft-lbf of kinetic energy at the muzzle and an advantage in penetrating soft body armor due to its smaller diameter and higher-than-normal pistol velocity. The most commonly found guns firing 7.62x25mm are the CZ-52 pistol and PPSh-41 submachingun. Having fired both I can say that the CZ-52 is a good pistol but that it was designed for wartime environments and not practical shooting competitions. It’s a little bit rough .. but the environment its designed for is also rough. The PPSh-41 is my favorite SMG along with the Heckler & Koch MP5. Full-auto controllability of the weapon is absolute despite a rate-of-fire of 1000 rounds per minute. Very few SMGs allow you to ‘walk’ the rounds onto the target but the PPSh-41 is an exception. I dislike the 71-round drum mag because it makes the gun heavy, but it is what you should use if you need to put an almost LMG-esque sustained fire hurting on a target area. The stick magazine is handy but it runs out … in half the time as the drum. Ballistically, the 7.62x25mm offers aiming advantages at long range (100 yards) versus 9mm Luger and is equal in bullet drop to the 5.7x28mm PDW. A 9mm Luger bullet will drop 8” and the 7.62x25mm will drop 4” at 100 yards. People lose their stereoscopic vision at 18 feet distance. Judging distance accurately is a matter of memorizing the apparent size of objects of known size and associating this with a known distance. This process is made even harder by being under stress. Minimizing bullet drop at distance reduces the need to hold over on a target or to guesstimate distance. You will be more accurate if you must defend yourself at extended distances when using a PPSh or CZ-52 due to the bullets improved trajectory. Ammunition selection for this caliber depends strongly on your intended target. The FMJ rounds are too stable to tumble soon enough in the target. As a consequence, the majority of the FMJ bullets wounding potential is wasted as the bullet travels out the back of the target. If armor piercing (steel core and oftentimes steel jacket with copper coating) ammunition is legal in your area, I would recommend that you own enough to at least load a few magazines. Did I mention that you MUST have spare magazines and ammunition for every gun that you own? Real life fighting for your life is apparently not as sexy as it is in the movies. You must eliminate your attacker(S) and to do so, you must take every advantage that you can get before the fight happens.

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