I just purchased my PM9 last month and shot for first time last week. Up til then, I have been carrying Speer Gold Dot 124 +P gor my G19. I see that Speer offers a short barrel version of this for 3" barrel firearms but it seems no one has it in stock. Upon looking for other short barrel options, Hornady Critical Defense 115gr. came up of which is available locally and apparently Critical Duty isn't optimized" for shorter barreled guns.
Aside from these 2 offerings, what other SD loads are ideally suited for this type of gun? And what should I expect differences to be if I were to use either Critical Duty or regular non SB GoldDot? Thanks!
Aside from these 2 offerings, what other SD loads are ideally suited for this type of gun? And what should I expect differences to be if I were to use either Critical Duty or regular non SB GoldDot? Thanks!

), connective tissue, muscle, maybe bone, space, perhaps some organ tissue and/or arterial walls, space, more stuff, muscle, space, etc. Even expanded bullets from a handgun have not been shown to wound outside of their direct path. Now, get that velocity up to around 2,200 fps or so and you actually have hydrostatic shock doing some damage. Below that threshold, however, there is not enough. Close means no more than far away insofar as that destructive velocity threshold. Heavier, "harder-hitting" rounds are better at smashing bone and arguably at creating additional projectiles from said bone than, say, "mouse-gun" calibers, but even "the big boys" only really damage what's in their direct path. ___Caveat: with brain hits there can certainly be a difference because you're talking about essentially tightly contained gelatin (lots o'water in the ol' noggin) and water, as we all know, doth not compress, ergo, more energy equals more pressure which is greatly magnified by the brain tissue.___
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