As a rule of thumb, you could figure that a pressure transducer will be maybe 20 dB less sensitive both to wind/breath noise and to solid-borne sound than a comparable pressure-gradient transducer. This is largely because of the higher membrane tension.
Now, 20 dB of protection is definitely nice--enough, in many cases, to make the difference between a ruined recording and one that's merely impaired. But interfering noise (either from wind or from something bumping into your setup) can very well cause higher signal levels than the loudest program material that you're recording that night; it can cause preamp overload or even microphone overload, neither of which you can filter out later.
If any interfering noise is audible in a recording (even at only a moderate level), and you know that you could have prevented some of it, I think you're likely to wish that you had done so. And unfortunately, sometimes one doesn't realize the risk that something will occur until it has already occurred.
--best regards