For a heavy calibre reliable auto handgun you can't beat the .45, again one of my favourite handguns in the automatic category.
9mm Browning looks & feels great, but I found insufficient blow-back for reliable operation in competition conditions. I think in all the years I shot comps the .45 failed me once with a jammed cartridge. It's a good heavy slug with heaps of stopping power.
At the last leg of our service pistol comps we had the "crouch" or "instinctive fire", which is a drawn weapon which cannot be raised above shoulder level, bent knees and crouching slightly, meaning once the range is open the weapon can be raised with either or both hands, but cannot be aimed via a straight arm & with the eye, and with a time limit requiring 12 shots in about 15 seconds.
This is the action most will encounter when surprised, and there is no time to aim. My best was with my beloved .357 Magnum Colt Trooper; 12 shots in the bull from 30 feet(form a circle with thumb & forefinger of both hands & that's the size of the bull) which included an unload & reload with speedloader & using a mix of semi & full wadcutters. Top score 590 out of a 660 total possible.
I had a standard Colt .45, a Smith & Wesson Combat .357 Magnum revolver with 6 inch barrel, and a Colt Trooper .357 Magnum revolver issued to many State Police in the US. I also elected a 6 inch barrel on the Trooper. A .380 Automatic completed the handgun bag, but I shot many many types on the range, including Barettas, 22's, Vostock, many variants of the .45, some .32 autos and a massive Thompson Contender, and of course .44 Magnums and the usual array of .38 revolvers and Glock, Sig Sauer and other autos.
The Colt Trooper was my favourite, precisely accurate and completely reliable under all conditions, easily drawn, handled beautifully, never jammed, never gave a single problem whether firing factory ammo, reloads, round head, semi or full wadcutters, and hot loads. I took it away with me hunting and it was a most enjoyable weapon to shoot with, and I misa it greatly as I've long since sold off my collection.
There is no way I would go for a centre mass shot on a bear.
It's just too hard to get through that skin & fur, let alone hit anything vital. A charging bear is liable to be loping, not standing, and they can move faster than a human. A moving target, dark fur, and a bone structure with a very thick sternum & ribs, and not knowing exactly where to hit, well I think my life would flash before my eyes.
A shotgun is a smooth bore so a rifled slug would need a rifled barrel, and again, it's not the calibre that counts so much, it's penetration and accuracy. Once a projectile cuts through the skin and hits subcutaneous muscle & arteries, it sets up a kind of sonic boom that causes arteries & veins to swell and burst under the pressure of blood pushed back through their systems. Slugs that hit bone can first fracture, and also bounce, arcing in any direction and even bouncing around the insides of the target, doing heavy or light damage. The round may not even exit, and many people and animals have been shot multiple times and with heavy calibre rounds and survived, as they hit no vital organs.
Centre mass shots work well on human beings and are taught in standard police and service pistol comps, because humans are what cops & servicemen will face and a centre mass shot is likely to break a rib, hit a lung, sever an artery or vein or bring down an opponent quickly. Bears are far larger and to put it in simple terms, have more space in the centre cavity and far thicker skin and a heavy layer of fur on top - see if you can find a picture of a skinned carcass and you'll be surprised at the difference between the big live animal, and the smaller structure without the fur.
I still say the only way to drop a charging bear is with a brain or heart shot, closely followed by a heavy shot to a lung or both lungs.
The only way I'm going to chance getting that close is walking on a bear skin rug...
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