EAA Witness Compact 10mm:
SICK OF COMPROMISE:
The one thing that has
always bothered me about Concealed Carry type guns is that they are
all about compromise. You give up power for smaller size. You give
up accuracy for a shorter barrel. You give up everything you really
want in a handgun for the ability to have it on you all the time.
Maybe I've grown cranky. Maybe I'm just fed up. Whatever the source
of my feelings, I'm tired of compromises. I'm tired of shooting tiny
guns that only make small holes, or dent paper. I want some raw
horse power. I want some excessive force. And I want it with some
decent accuracy, control and something that could get me through a
knock down, drag out gun fight. A real gun. But it can't be a 1911,
and it can't be a .45... or Tim would string me up with my own
gunbelt.
SOMETHING DIFFERENT:
I was given the chance to
“pick something” from the EAA catalog for review. Anything. Then
shoot the hell out of it and see if it holds up. I've done 9's and I
don't like .40's all that much, and you are all sick of my gushing
on .45 ACP. So I picked a Compact Witness in 10mm. This is an all
steel, double action, 10 round, 10mm pistol with a 4 inch barrel,
fixed 3 dot sights, and EAA's “Wonder Finish”. The MSRP is only
$450. That's what it is, but it doesn't really tell you guys what it
really is. The gun is rather heavy for its size. Being that it is in
a caliber with such potency, that weight is not a downside. The gun
is in an intermediate size for being called a compact. I guess it is
smaller than the full sized gun, but it isn't really all that
compact. The gun is thick through the grip so you can really hold on
to it, but the length is too short to get all your fingers aboard.
Even with the magazine's finger extension, you still cant get your
pinky to join the others on the gun. This might not be an issue for
you out there with knuckles that are not swollen from arthritis. The
Wonder Finish is an attractive finish that feels slick to the touch.
It reminds me of NP3, for those that know what that is. As good
looking as the finish is, the one thing I really like about it is
that it is very easy to clean. After test firing all I did was spray
it down with a little Hoppe's #9, rinse that off with a little
Hornady One Shot, then wiped it off. It looked clean as new and was
slick as ever. Some Hoppe's and a bore snake cleaned inside the
barrel, and I put a little Tetra Gun Oil on the rails and sear and
that was it. I was done cleaning in about 2 minutes.
THE CARTRIDGE:
This little beast is
chambered for is something that most shooters are not familiar with.
I showed it to a few guys, and they had never seen nor heard of 10MM
before. (I know I live in the sticks, but there are good people
here) So let's review a little history. The 10mm was introduced in
1983 in conjunction with the Bren Ten pistol by the well known
firearms house of Dornaus & Dixon... We all know those guys, right?
No, me neither. All I know about them was that they had this pistol
that was an epic flop. The famous Jeff Cooper was a huge supported
of the Bren Ten, and the pistol was good. It just never caught on. I
don't know why. The cartridge is brilliant. It can be chambered in
guns that you can chamber .45 in, meaning 1911 type guns. It offers
a wide performance spectrum from target loads to deer hunting loads.
You can go from 135 grain bullets at 1600 fps, to 200 grain bullets
at 1200 fps. This gives you performance like no other auto
cartridge... you want this sort of versatility in a more common
platform, you will have to go with a .357 magnum or a .41 magnum
because the 10mm is right in between those two. That's a lot of
power and flexibility that you just don't find in your normal
automatic pistol. Especially not an auto for concealed carry
purposes.
In 1986 in Dade County
Florida, the FBI got into a big shootout with a couple of baddies
who didn't fall over dead like they were supposed to. The Agents hit
them repeatedly, but the baddies kept fighting, and Agents got
killed. The FBI reevaluated everything about their side arms. They
examined the calibers and the bullets and they added it all up. The
answer was the 10mm.
Unfortunately for all the
lawyers and accountants the FBI hires, the 10mm was too much for
them. Too much recoil. So they downloaded the cartridge to mild
levels. S&W said that they could do that in a 9mm length cartridge
and put it into a smaller gun... and that's how we got the .40 S&W
cartridge, called the Short and Weak by those who had become used to
the 10mm.
Looking back at this
development, I can see that it was a good move and now most handguns
are chambered in 9mm, .40 S&W, or .45 ACP. The downside is that the
10mm just fell out of the public eye. Today, it's almost invisible.
The gun store that I work at doesn't carry 10mm ammunition, and we
don't carry any 10mm guns either. I drove out to SLC, Utah and
stopped by every gun store that I knew of. It took all day, but I
hit 9 shops. Only one of them stocked ammo, and none of them had a
pistol. The one place that did have some ammo, only had 4 boxes. 4
boxes in a city of 2 million. I was discouraged. Fortunately there
is the internet, and more ammo was ordered.
TIME TO SHOOT:
I didn't want to shoot this gun
alone... I wanted second opinions. Shooting Buddy Ben came with me
one time, then The Travis came with me another time. We are all in
agreement that the gun shoots very well, accuracy is more than
acceptable, and the recoil isn't just manageable, but enjoyable. Ben
made a comment worth note, “The
FBI couldn't handle this? Sissies.”
I agree. The 10mm out of an
all steel gun is really not much more kick than a .45, and I once
taught a little Japanese lady that weight less than two bags of dog
food how to shoot a .45 and she did great with it.
Ben and I decided to shoot
at steel. The base plate of an abandoned oven is made of sheet metal
thicker than most desert dwelling kitchen appliances. Ben had his
trusted XD Tactical .45 that we used for comparison. The 5 inch
barreled .45, shooting 230 grain FMJ Blazer Brass loads, punched
through the metal, but pushed in a big dent before breaking through
it. The EAA Witness 10mm with its 4” tube blasted through the same
metal so easily that it looked like we used a Dewalt power drill.
The penetration is incredibly impressive. You don't see this sort of
power from a gun you hide on your person.
We did find an interesting
problem with the gun. EAA only sent us one magazine for the pistol,
so I can't tell if it's a mag issue or an ammo issue. American Eagle
180 grain rounds would jam the gun on the second round from the last
in the magazine – every time. This was a failure to feed as the
round would stand up in the magazine and the slide close on that
side of the cartridge. First thought was that this is obviously a
magazine issue, but it only happened with AE 180's. Norma, Buffalo
Bore, Hornady, PMC, and Winchester did not jam.
The other thing that we all
agreed upon was that the gun its self still needs a little work. The
slide seemed to batter the frame pretty good, especially with the
hotter Norma and Winchester loads. I think the spring is a bit too
light from the factory, it could be two to four pounds heavier. The
gun has some sharp corners around the trigger guard and muzzle. The
front sight post is formed with the slide instead of dovetailed in
like it should be. This means you can't install night sights, or
different sized posts to adjust the point of impact for different
loadings.
CONCLUSION:
While the gun is good as it
is... especially for the money. It could easily be better. You could
take it from about a 7, to a solid 9.
The gun falls in a unique
category in that it is big enough to not be as easily concealable as
a compact, yet too small to be a target type gun. It needs to be
optimized for our concealment purposes. Here is what needs to be
done. First off, the sights. I know I always bitch about the sights
on a pistol or hail them as needed. Sights and trigger are two
critical things that can not be skimped on. EAA should have a guy in
house to grind off the front sight post, cut in a dovetail, and put
in Tritium night sights. That is a must for a gun to be taken
seriously by me. Target guns and Defense guns need two different
kinds of sights. Different purposes. This EAA Compact Witness is
supposed to be a Defensive gun. The grips. The grip panels on the
gun are good and... er... grippy. They help soak up the recoil a lot
and make shooting this 10MM a joy. Unfortunately they are too thick.
And the soft rubber allows fabric to cling, making the gun print too
much. In my attempts to conceal this gun, I found that it printed
too much under just light shirts like what I like to wear in warm
weather. You would have to wear a sports coat over this thing to
keep it hidden. I suggest to get rid of the grips and use thin
profile aluminum grips from Hogue. This would slim down the profile
a great deal and make packing CCW much much easier. The finger rest
on the magazine is another thing. The gun is too short for a 3
finger grip, and the finger rest doesn't help me one bit. Go ahead
and let the pinky swing free on this one, and let the gun be just
that much shorter for concealment. Now for the biggie. I've not
tested a handgun that BEGS for a Melt Job more than this Witness. It
has sharp edges on its sharp edges. The front of the gun has the
full length rails that extend to the muzzle, all they way past any
point of being useful, straight to being irritating. If this was
taken to a belt sander for about a minute and a half – it would be
brilliant. A custom gunsmith should be able to do this to your gun
with very little effort, but with huge returns. Of course then he
would have to refinish it and you would lose the Wonder Finish –
which even EAA can't tell me what it is. One last thing. The gun
needs a recoil spring about 2 pounds heavier. Wolff Gun Springs can
fix that one with no problem.
Considering the price of a new EAA
Witness... having this work done to it wouldn't be out of the realm
of reasonable when you take into account what you would then have in
your hands.
A concealed carry gun that makes no compromises.
Copyright
G H Hill 1999-2012
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