We’re saying more or less the same thing even if I phrased it poorly. All the tests are 1 bullet or one group, all say results are going to be erratic because you hit different twigs every time, and all say “dont shoot thru brush”. Unfortunately shooting through a LOT of brush—it may not be as thick as what some picture all the time, but shooting through tiny windows in a wall of brush many yards thick would not be at all an exaggeration—is as normal as can be in some places. Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesnt, sometimes the bullet actually makes it through the window, but its never “controlled” enough to say why.Well first, he was measuring the deflection after 15 yards of the bullet going through willow and Alder- you can’t even see an animal through that. Even still here is a 6” difference in his results between the worst and best bullet/caliber. Third, he only had one “small caliber” in his test, and the results of the large calibers were all over the place.
His, like every public one before (as he stated) is way too short on sample size to draw any conclusions from. The bullet that did the best in his results, is also very poor terminally.
“Brush busting” is largely a myth about like ft-lbs of energy needed to kill. And even in well done, as well as it has been done testing; the results are all over the place. In brush that someone would actually shoot through (that is positive ID the animal and its anatomy), as many times a flat nosed solid .45 will deflect less, a small diameter pointed bullet won’t hit the brush at all. His deer picture at the end of the article is a perfect example- in that scenario, it’s going to be about even, or even favoring small diameter bullets. The larger bullet may deflect slightly less if it hits brush, but it’s going to hit more brush always due to larger diameter. The answer is to pick a hole and put the shot through it. If you are going to try to get a bullet through brush, expect deflection no matter what.
This was from a 270win and 130gr Partition. A 30 yard shot, the deer 5’ish yards on the other side of brush and small trees-
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That’s the entrance, and the bullet was tumbling at impact. I’ve had tumbling/deflected bullets cause wounds and misses from .277 to 375’s and 45 and 50cal MZ bullets. Though I haven’t had it happen to 6.5m and below, that’s just sample size- they all do it.
Photos for humor, not to make any point. Fwiw both were 250grain 45cal copper monos (barnes t-ez) fired from a muzzleloader at 45-70ish velocity, and neither connected with the deer on the other side. Neither is “brush” and neither was fired “through brush” intentionally, but it seemed a good time to drag them out.
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