

Cheap ammo is not always worth even the lesser price.Ģ. 32 Auto rounds.īy the way, I shoot a lot of Wolf ammo in other calibers and have no problem with it, so I am not prejudiced against Wolf ammo.ġ. 30 carbine revolver, but there is no other use for the. At least I could shoot those rounds in my Ruger. I have experienced this same problem, to a lesser extent, with Wolf steel cased. In addition, we both felt powder and gas blow back when we shot the pistol and theorized that it was because of a failure of the brass cases to completely seal the chamber and that allowed gases to blow back past the cases. Now this pistol runs 100% with the Winchester ammo, but these Wolf rounds would not even completely open the action and eject the spent rounds. You could tell from the report and recoil that they were unusually weak.īut the biggest problem was that they were so weak that they would not cycle the action on the pistol. The rounds were noticeably weak when shot.

He only wanted these for target practice and thought the less-expensive Wolf ammo would be all right for such use. 32 ACP, 71 grain, Round Nose FMJ bullets. I would rather hit a vital organ with a truncated cone bullet, than have a JHP fail to penetrate deeply enough.

Well, because in this small round, JHPs will often fail to expand, and even if they do expand, that will often cause them to fail to reach the FBI standard of 12 inches minimum penetration. I usually carry this cartridge in it, the Winchester 71 grain Truncated Cone cartridge. It is not anywhere close to a real fighting handgun and the caliber is very weak for a centerfire cartridge. It is usually used as a Back Up Gun (BUG). The reason for this pistol is that it is very small and can be carried very easily.
