but I find it pretty odd that the majority of "blew up on the shoulder" claims are from eld-x.
“Bullets blowing up on the shoulder” stories have been around forever- there are dozens a year on this site alone. Berger “blow up” stories are cliché at this point. “Accua- Bombs”, SST’s- there even been multiple people swearing on their life that they’ve had Barnes TSX/TTSX’s “blow up and not penetrate the shoulder”.
Because he had pretty telling pics (to me), I started the thread for discussion.
The issue is that the stated situation and behavior of the bullet does not match. Where did all the wound cavity from that bullet go? You don’t magically frag 147gr of lead and have a slit for a wound.
The Berger failures of not opening and penciling make sense, "blowing up on the shoulder" and not penetrating into the cavity doesn't, why so many claims? Is the eld-x just that much more popular that more people who don't understand terminal ballistics are misinterpreting? I don't know, but it's interesting.
(Bolded) Absolutely. Every time there is a new bullet that becomes very popular, the stories start flooding about how “they fail”. The ELD-X is the most popular “long range” hunting bullets by volume, Hornady Precision Hunter ammo is by far the most available and popular by volume “good” factory ammunition, etc.
People do not understand animal anatomy, they have almost no understanding about fact based terminal ballistics, nor do they know how to piece together evidence in a systemic and logical fashion that leads to correct conclusions. You combine all of that with what had been pounded into people’s heads about bullets, guns, cartridges, and the result is a bunch incorrect and ludicrous “experiences”.
Humans are horrible at objective data, and the least reliable evidence are humans- and the participants involved in events are the least reliable of all. It takes a lot of practice and training for humans to have a high probability of remembering events correctly- and if your job doesn’t require that, you don’t have it.
I’ve gotten back to camps and the guy I was hunting with and killed an animal right beside me (on video) is telling the story to everyone else and it is 100% not what happened. They argue and argue that it is, then we look at the video and they stand there dumbfounded trying to reconcile what the honestly beloved happened, with what actually happened.
I’ve had dudes want to fight me because they swore the animal was facing left when it was actually facing to the right- and that the bullet blew up on the entrance. Then the video and/or blood trail showed it was opposite of what they thought and they were looking at the exit. And, others where they wouldn’t look in the the other direction for an animal that ran off after being shot because “I know how it was facing”. Etc, etc, etc.
I helped at a butcher shop for a few seasons, and worked full time for one season there. Over a thousand deer a deer came through each season, and the stories could be told for days. The amount of “failed bullet” stories was incredible. In lots of cases I was able to track the wound and find the bullet inside the deer- and they still would swear up and down- sometimes mad as hell- that “that ain’t what happened”.
There are 1 in 1 million events of course- however, with what is known about the mechanisms of how bullets work, the “it only penetrated a couple inches” in an deer/elk events just aren’t a thing.