cannabineer
Ursus marijanus
"Fast" autopistol rounds are a fairly recent phenomenon. The .25, .32, .38 and.45 ACP couldn't crack a thousand until light bullets and fast powders made for a few 1000+ .45 loadings. Then there are the shorties like. 380 and 9mm Makarov.I knew wheel gun rounds were slow, but all the auto pistol rounds I've got are much quicker. Don't own any .45 ACP but I have a .44 mag, .45 long colt and a .44 cap and ball revolver.
The 9mm Parabellum and 7.62 Mauser rounds from WWI Germany were the zippy exceptions in their day. More recently, the 10mm group (10mm, .40) came onto the scene. The .38 Super was rescued from oblivion by the action pistol crowd, as it could be hotrodded to "major power factor" (bullet weight in grains x velocity in fps greater than 175000).
Some oddballs that never became popular: 9mm and .45 Win Mag, .41 and .50 Action Express, .44 AutoMag and its bottlenecked .357 and .41 siblings, and the "short rifle" sorts represented by the 5.7x28 being offered by FN.
Interestingly, the "baby AR" handgun cartridges are being promoted for close-quarters fighting, where they get to deliver most of their muzzle energy to the terminal medium (a.k.a. unlucky bastard).
cn