10mm guns could be chambered in 9x23 win?

Radny97

New member
Now that 10mm is the new hotness, with lots of manufacturers releasing new handguns chambered in that cartridge and building strong enough actions to handle the 10mm, l wonder if any of these manufacturers have thought of also chambering these guns in 9x23 win?

The OAL of the two cartridges is nearly identical, so the slide action would not have to be changed. And although the 9x23 is higher pressure, it’s thinner so a 9x23 barrel would have added bulk to deal with that. Plus the casing itself is rated for the pressure of the 9x23.

Seems to me that with some testing a manufacturer could pretty much just swap out the slide on a 10mm gun to 9x23 and have a subcontractor like MecGar do a run of magazines where you just take a 10mm mag and adjust the magazine lips, put in a 9mm follower, and you’d be set.

I have to say that having 9mm capacity in a gun that can shoot 124 gn. bullets at 1500 fps would be pretty attractive to me.

Seems to me that one of the reasons 10mm is getting so popular is because people like a high powered round in a regular sized semiauto (i.e. not a Coonan or Desert Eagle). Chambering guns in 9x23 in the same platform that runs 10mm seems like a good idea to me. Thoughts?



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TruthTellers

New member
Doubtful because it's not as popular as 10mm is. Even during the last 20 years when 10mm was about obsolete, there was still a large enough following to keep it alive to the point Glock and a few others were making 10's. I know of no manufacturer today who makes a 9x23 and if they do make it, they make it for countries that ban civilian ownership of guns in "military calibers."

.357 Sig gets the same results in a smaller frame. PITA to reload, but the bottleneck design is a reliable feeder.
 

Radny97

New member
Doubtful because it's not as popular as 10mm is. Even during the last 20 years when 10mm was about obsolete, there was still a large enough following to keep it alive to the point Glock and a few others were making 10's. I know of no manufacturer today who makes a 9x23 and if they do make it, they make it for countries that ban civilian ownership of guns in "military calibers."

.357 Sig gets the same results in a smaller frame. PITA to reload, but the bottleneck design is a reliable feeder.



True, but 357 sig can’t do the heavier bullets that 9x23 can, has limited bullet profiles, and you have the exact same capacity as 10mm.

I know it’s probably a pipe dream, but i would still love to see a 9x23 double stack gun in production.


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disseminator

New member
I have to say that having 9mm capacity in a gun that can shoot 124 gn. bullets at 1500 fps would be pretty attractive to me.

357 SIG all day long.

The smaller guns that can shoot the 357 SIG are widely available right now and most 40 cal pistols simply swap the barrel and your good to go.

9x23 is going to offer no advantage whatsoever since the brass will be even more rare than the 357 SIG, and the 357 SIG is 100% with bullets up to and including 147 grains.

Hand-loading has shown my M&P and my SIG 226 are accurate and reliable with the 147 (Speer TMJ and Gold Dot HP) from 1250 to 1300 fps.

What advantage is the 9x23 going to provide over that?

I'm not knocking your dream, but why pine for a fantasy when you can have that performance in the 357 SIG today?
 

Dan-O

New member
Pretty sure lone wolf distributors made a conversion barrel for a while. IIRC, they stopped making them because people refused to follow their instructions on altering 10mm mags to ensure proper feeding.
 

stagpanther

New member
9 x 25 dillon has been out for many years and it's a direct neck down of the 10mm case to hold a 9mm bullet. I have one for my 20SF. It can shoot the 9mm bullet faster than any other conventional based pistol cartridge that I know of. Only drawback I can think of is a relatively short neck for holding the bullets.
 

JohnKSa

Administrator
The advantage of the 9x23 over the 9x25Dillon would be increased capacity since the 9x25 is basically a necked down 10mm. That would probably account for another two or three 9x23 rounds that would fit in a 15 round 10mm magazine compared to 9x25 Dillon rounds. In a single-stack mag, it might only be one round extra.

The downside of the 9x23 is that magazines would need to be altered to deal with it while 9x25 rounds will feed out of unaltered 10mm magazines.
 

stagpanther

New member
This is what Mike McNett of Double Tap has to say: [Quote dated in 2005]

"I have more than 25,000rds. through one of my BarSto barrels in 9X25. It looks like it is new. The myths about eroding the throat or the chamber are exactly that....myths. I like both the 9X25 and the 9X23, but the ballistic edge definitely goes to the 9X25. They are both loud and neither of them really have much recoil. DoubleTap Ammunition is the only manufacturer** to ever load the 9X25 commercially and it will remain a permanent fixture of our lineup. the 9X23 may make it into the lineup, but not until the end of the year.
-Mike"

**please note that since McNett made that quote, at least one other manufacturer has begun making and selling 9 x 25 Dillon cartridges.
 
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agtman

Moderator
The advantage of the 9x23 over the 9x25Dillon would be increased capacity since the 9x25 is basically a necked down 10mm. That would probably account for another two or three 9x23 rounds that would fit in a 15 round 10mm magazine compared to 9x25 Dillon rounds. In a single-stack mag, it might only be one round extra.

'Capacity advantage'? Huh? :confused:

With a single-stack magazine, a 1-round difference in capacity is a wash. No advantage to either cartridge ...

But with the Glock 20's double-stack mag, if you can load 15 rounds of 10mm in the unmodified factory mag, you can load 15 rounds of 9x25 Dillon in it too, the Dillon being merely a 10mm case necked-down to .355/9mm.

So advantage ----> 9x25 - because you don't have to modify a 10mm mag to be able to shoot it (only a barrel swap is needed), and capacity will be the same as what the mag would hold of 10mm rounds.

The downside of the 9x23 is that magazines would need to be altered to deal with it while 9x25 rounds will feed out of unaltered 10mm magazines.

That's correct. So advantage ----> 9x25 Dillon.
 

agtman

Moderator
If I need more power than a 357 Sig or a 357 magnum I have several 44 magnums.

In an autoloader? ... for which you need only swap in a barrel to run it? :rolleyes:

By the way, the 357Sig isn't even in the same ballpark, ballistically, as the 9x25 Dillon.
 

JohnKSa

Administrator
'Capacity advantage'? Huh?

With a single-stack magazine, a 1-round difference in capacity is a wash. No advantage to either cartridge ...
A 1 round capacity advantage is a 1 round capacity advantage. It may not be a significant advantage, but it's there. Where it might start to be significant is in a double stack mag where you can gain up to 3 rounds (20%) increase in capacity in a 15 round 10mm mag.
But with the Glock 20's double-stack mag, if you can load 15 rounds of 10mm in the unmodified factory mag, you can load 15 rounds of 9x25 Dillon in it too, the Dillon being merely a 10mm case necked-down to .355/9mm.
Correct, that's why I said that "the advantage of the 9x23 over the 9x25Dillon would be increased capacity". Clearly there's no advantage of the 9x25Dillon over the 10mm in capacity because they both have cases the same diameter.
...9x25 - because you don't have to modify a 10mm mag to be able to shoot it...
Correct, that's why I said that the "downside of the 9x23 is that magazines would need to be altered to deal with it while 9x25 rounds will feed out of unaltered 10mm magazines.
So advantage ----> 9x25 Dillon.
From my perspective, I would agree--I don't have any interest in bending perfectly good magazines. But someone who really wants the extra capacity might see it differently. That's why I provided both sides of the story.
 

Nanuk

New member
In an autoloader? ... for which you need only swap in a barrel to run it?

Did I say that? If I want an auto loader 357 magnum I will get a Coonan.

By the way, the 357Sig isn't even in the same ballpark, ballistically, as the 9x25 Dillon.

I never said it was.

https://www.underwoodammo.com/produ...p-jacketed-hollow-point?variant=7865908887609

https://www.underwoodammo.com/colle...p-jacketed-hollow-point?variant=7865900957753

It is a lot closer than 38 VS 357 which many people disagree with.

https://www.underwoodammo.com/colle...d-jacketed-hollow-point?variant=7865902465081

But the 357 magnum is.

We don't all need hicap auto loaders.
 

tipoc

New member
For a 9x23, just use a 38 Super mag which are plentiful.

Typically the way to go if you want 9x23 is to have an extra barrel made for a 38 Super. The Super is the parent cartridge, so to speak, of the 9x23. So same OAL and same diameter. The latter works at higher pressures though.

tipoc
 

74A95

New member
Typically the way to go if you want 9x23 is to have an extra barrel made for a 38 Super. The Super is the parent cartridge, so to speak, of the 9x23. So same OAL and same diameter. The latter works at higher pressures though.

tipoc

No. The two cartridges are different. The 9X23 Winchester is just a long 9mm Luger (9X19), though with strengthened case walls. Both are rimless and tapered with the same head and case mouth dimensions.

The 38 Super is straight-walled with a semi-rim, and has different head and mouth dimensions.
 

tipoc

New member
Yes I said that the two cartridges are different. But the 9x23 derived from the 38 Super and not the 9mm. It was changed to make it stronger and to handle higher pressures.

You are incorrect about the development of the 9x23. You can read more about that here and I encourage you to do so...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/9×23mm_Winchester

https://pistolsmith.com/9x23mm/9127-bad-9x23-advice.html

http://www.bobclevenger.com/9x23Win.html

https://bearingarms.com/bob-o/2015/08/15/9x23-winchester-armys-next-pistol-caliber/

tipoc
 
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