So you are saying if you bleed out faster you do not die faster? This is literally what I’m arguing.
It is important to discuss when shooting a 223 Remington on elk or moose. It will absolutely kill then but choose the standard hunting world knowledge of heavy for caliber bonded bullet and it make take a little longer than people have the stomach for to kill it.
what of my “preaching” is false?
The idea that energy has a direct correlation to wounding. What you gave as an example before in the 195 TMK example is true. The larger bullet will cause more wounding. Any projectile that is maximized for that effect will increase with size and mass inside the maximized velocity window. But all things have to be equal. Where you’ve missed the point, is why it all matters. Recoil and its management in successful shot making is exponentially inverse. While you will increase wounding in a 168 eldm from a 308 vs the 77 TMK from a 223, first round hit rates as well as sight picture and follow ups all suffer. This has all been shown scientifically with data in this thread. Your argument along with all the others who have tried to make it haven’t been accepted because it does not accomplish the goal. Form has stated and shown evidence of maximized projectiles from large delivery systems. You’re not sharing new information, you just refuse to understand the why and purpose.
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