steffen707
Lil-Rokslider
I'm curious for the people that believe the whole 1000ftlbs for deer and 1500ftlbs for elk rule of thumb...... If you don't believe in this type of BS, then please don't clog up the thread. I know there are people on both sides of this camp.
what is the necessary ftlbs for monolithic bullets like the barnes LRX to kill deer or elk?
Monos have shown they retain their weight better than other bullet construction, but need a velocity on impact of about 2000fps or more to expand properly.
So what i'm trying to figure out is, if my cartridge has enough oomph to keep a lower weight mono bullet above 2000ft/s, is there a ftlbs of energy component as well to be aware of?
Example. 7RM 168gr ABLR at a muzzle velocity of about 2846 should have 1500ftlbs of energy left at 600yards.
Does a 7RM shooting a Barnes 139gr LRX at 3000 muzzle velocity with 2000fps remaining at 530 yards, still have elk killing power with only 1236ftlbs? Consider apples to apples, both bullets land in the bread basket, (I know I know, a 22 can kill an elk at 530 yards if placed properly)
what is the necessary ftlbs for monolithic bullets like the barnes LRX to kill deer or elk?
Monos have shown they retain their weight better than other bullet construction, but need a velocity on impact of about 2000fps or more to expand properly.
So what i'm trying to figure out is, if my cartridge has enough oomph to keep a lower weight mono bullet above 2000ft/s, is there a ftlbs of energy component as well to be aware of?
Example. 7RM 168gr ABLR at a muzzle velocity of about 2846 should have 1500ftlbs of energy left at 600yards.
Does a 7RM shooting a Barnes 139gr LRX at 3000 muzzle velocity with 2000fps remaining at 530 yards, still have elk killing power with only 1236ftlbs? Consider apples to apples, both bullets land in the bread basket, (I know I know, a 22 can kill an elk at 530 yards if placed properly)