![]() I documented all of the data I could tracking caliber, type of bullet (if known), where the bullet hit and whether or not the person was incapacitated. I talked to the participants of gunfights, read police reports, attended autopsies, and scoured the newspapers, magazines, and Internet for any reliable accounts of what happened to the human body when it was shot. Over a 10-year period, I kept track of stopping power results from every shooting I could find. This led to an unrealistically high stopping power percentage, because it factored out many of the cases where a person didn't stop! I wanted to look at hits anywhere on the body and get a realistic idea of actual stopping power, no matter how many hits it took to get it. Multiple hits screwed up their data, so they excluded them. For consistency purposes, they ONLY included hits to the torso and ONLY included cases where the person was hit with just a single round. I always had a slight problem with the methodology of Marshall and Sanow's work. He suggested that if people didn't believe his data, they should collect their own and do their own analysis. In the article, Ayoob took his critics to task. He came out with his own stopping power data around the time Marshall published Handgun Stopping Power. One thing I remember reading that made a lot of sense to me was an article by Massad Ayoob. The more I read, the more confused I get. I even have a first edition of Gunshot Injuries by Louis Lagarde published in 1915.Įvery source I read has different recommendations. Over the years I bought all of the rest of Marshall's books as well as anything else I could find on the subject. When Marshall's first book came out in 1992, I ordered it immediately, despite the fact that I was a college student and really couldn't afford its $39 price tag. I remember reading Handguns magazine back in the late 1980s when Evan Marshall was writing articles about his stopping power studies. ![]() 32 revolver's reload animation, there are still live rounds present in the speedloader after reloading the gun's cylinder.I've been interested in firearm stopping power for a very long time. Old Olney underground - One can be found in perfect condition, on a shelf.Dominic D'Ellsadro, Seagrave Holmes, Sierra Petrovita, and Sticky all carry the.They can sometimes be found in Pulowski Preservation shelters, along with some skeletons.Raiders and Talon Company mercs carry them.Springvale - One can also be found with Silver at the small ranch, which can be entered right after exiting Vault 101.National Guard depot bunker - One can be found on a wooden shelf, next to a box of 5 bullets for it.Minefield - One can be found near the mattress in the building where Arkansas snipes from.There is a Nuka-Cola vending machine, whiskey, and Quantum right next to it, which help in locating it. Hubris Comics - One can be found in the building, under a table in a dead man's hand, implying he committed suicide.James is equipped with one after exiting Tranquility Lane, and two can be found inside Project Purity, one in the gift shop, and another in the basement sub-levels.Also, Shorty will have this weapon if the Small Guns path of the quest Big Trouble in Big Town is followed. Big Town - Flash and Timebomb will always be wielding one.Durability (number of attacks before breaking) Damage per attack (damage per projectile)
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