S.B.
While it is not illegal to make solid copper bullets, like the Barnes X bullet, it is illegal to make solid brass bullets. Brass is much harder and has other qualities that make it quite a departure from copper as a bullet material. Thanks for the suggestion, but in this case (no pun intended) information on Barnes bullets won't be helpful. It seems like the person Lloyd refers to has found a legal way to make mostly brass bullets, which as Lloyd alludes to, is a significant advancement for those who wish to shoot solids. The Barnes bullets on the other hand are perfect for expansion because of the softer copper material and I carry those bullets in my short barrel 45acp for self defense. To give you a little history, the solid brass bullets were outlawed in the late 1980's because a solid brass bullet out of a 25acp over 1200fps will defeat most body armour. Back in the early 1980's, a company called Personal Protection Systems formerly made solid brass rounds for most defense calibers, including a 1250fps 25acp round that I carried in an all stainless Bauer Baby Browning clone when it was legal. The federal law specifically outlaws "armor piercing ammunition" as a handgun bullet "constructed entirely" from "tungsten alloys, steel, iron, brass, bronze, berylium copper, or depleted uranium." 27 Code of Federal Regulations § 178.11.
So I would still like to know where I can purchase some of those "punch" bullets.
Roll Tide