sndmn11
"DADDY"
3600fps and a 100gr Etip sound like pretty great friends.
Lots of word salad there.We can go back and forth all day. The last few posts above this are excellent. Respectable non-argumentative guys with actual experience and nothing to prove.
So now it’s about wound channels? No. It’s about marginal shots which we can all agree happen. No benchrests on flat ground and adrenaline free trigger pulls when we’re hunting elk on public land. So if the wound channel isn’t in the ideal spot it’s good to have the energy to cause damage because of hydrostatic shock.
We don’t shoot turkeys with cannons but every once in awhile it seems like the BBs bounce right off. They are extremely tough as well. Think about that for a second….. why don’t we use the same size shot for turkeys that we do rabbits? States even regulate the minimum size shot for turkeys. They want that energy! And for the record it has nothing to do with chest pounding because “I shoot a magnum”. To me it’s about respect for the animals I pursue. I want them dead on their feet before they even hit the dirt.
Disclaimer: Dead on their feet is just a figure of speech. I have to say that so I don’t have to read about the scientific facts about oxygen loss to the brain being the actual cause of death which takes a few seconds. It’s also a fact that in steep thick elk country they don’t have to make it too too far to land in some pile of stuff where we walk right by and never find them. I’ve looked for elk before where we ended up finding them the next day…. or days later after the birds revealed their resting place and said wow… we were so close the first night. We walked right past him.
We can go back and forth all day. The last few posts above this are excellent. Respectable non-argumentative guys with actual experience and nothing to prove.
So now it’s about wound channels?
No. It’s about marginal shots which we can all agree happen. No benchrests on flat ground and adrenaline free trigger pulls when we’re hunting elk on public land. So if the wound channel isn’t in the ideal spot it’s good to have the energy to cause damage because of hydrostatic shock.
We don’t shoot turkeys with cannons but every once in awhile it seems like the BBs bounce right off. They are extremely tough as well. Think about that for a second….. why don’t we use the same size shot for turkeys that we do rabbits? States even regulate the minimum size shot for turkeys. They want that energy!
And for the record it has nothing to do with chest pounding because “I shoot a magnum”. To me it’s about respect for the animals I pursue. I want them dead on their feet before they even hit the dirt.
I like data that isn't circumstantial, which is why I immediately go to the numbers. Data like that doesn't lie and has nothing to do with shot placement.
My mistake. Energy has nothing to do with penetration or the amount of damage related to expending that energy. What was I thinking! A tack driver is the ticket! Bust out the 17s!
My mistake. Energy has nothing to do with penetration or the amount of damage related to expending that energy.
What was I thinking! A tack driver is the ticket! Bust out the 17s!
Using your same logic then, due to its constant diameter advantage, a .30 caliber bullet would deliver a larger wound channel than a .25 caliber, no? Let’s assume same bullet (partition, accubond, TBT, etc…) out of both rifles at roughly the same energy on impact? If we use energy instead of velocity or bullet weight, doesn’t that normalize the experiment since energy is a function of both?Even if there were, the wound channel from an extremely light 17cal bullets would be very narrow- like very small broadhead, and would generally kill slowly.
Bounce right off an elk3600fps and a 100gr Etip sound like pretty great friends.
Using your same logic then, due to its constant diameter advantage, a .30 caliber bullet would deliver a larger wound channel than a .25 caliber, no? Let’s assume same bullet (partition, accubond, TBT, etc…) out of both rifles at roughly the same energy on impact?
If we use energy instead of velocity or bullet weight, doesn’t that normalize the experiment since energy is a function of both?
What if we went one step further to normalize and used non-expanding FMJ rounds for the experiment.
At similar energy levels on impact are you prepared to argue that a .25 is going to create a larger wound channel than a .30?
Why do you suppose military sniper rifles are .30 or larger?
The bottom line is that with similar bullet construction and performance a larger caliber projectile should naturally expand further than a smaller caliber round thus creating a larger wound channel.
I think in your paragraph one...it doesn't matter whether you shoot an elk with a .25 110 grain accubond or a .30 caliber 180 grain accubond and zap them behind the shoulder.Using your same logic then, due to its constant diameter advantage, a .30 caliber bullet would deliver a larger wound channel than a .25 caliber, no? Let’s assume same bullet (partition, accubond, TBT, etc…) out of both rifles at roughly the same energy on impact? If we use energy instead of velocity or bullet weight, doesn’t that normalize the experiment since energy is a function of both?
What if we went one step further to normalize and used non-expanding FMJ rounds for the experiment. At similar energy levels on impact are you prepared to argue that a .25 is going to create a larger wound channel than a .30? Why do you suppose military sniper rifles are .30 or larger?
The bottom line is that with similar bullet construction and performance a larger caliber projectile should naturally expand further than a smaller caliber round thus creating a larger wound channel.
Bounce right off an elk
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Exit holes can be very useful though, tracking through thick timber where you can walk right by a bull.I don't want an exit hole! I want the bullet to fragment, destroy soft tissue and leave all the energy in the animal.
I shoot SST 180GR in 06. Shots from 80-560yds and no exit wounds except for one. All I find is the copper jacket and 40grs of the base of the bullet just under the hide on the opposite side.
Most devastation was a 450yd neck shot on a 7x8 bull. He dropped mid stride with a baseball size wound never did find that bullet but lots of fragments in that wound.
I have an elk hunter this year that's taking the 257 for late season cow in NM.
115gr will get it done!
There is no doubt in my mind that you have a better grasp on this than myself. I believe you gave me a link or two in the past that was some pretty good reading on wound channels and the lack of "hydrostatic shock". If Im not mistaken it was a study on human wounds during war.I like data too. So what does energy do for you exactly? Please be specific.
My 115vld is a little anemic @3250 but I’ve killed WT, Mule deer, Aoudad, Elk, pronghorn, Nilgi, Axis, Oryx, and ton of hogs up to 380’s lb with it. Under 400 yards it’s great after that it’s energy gets a little light quick. 1500-1600 KE is my limit on elk, oryx and nilgi. I’ve killed further out but recovery always seem exponentially longer distance for same shot placement. That’s my personal observations atleastI have two rifles one is a 257 weatherby that I Have taken 11 Antelope with and am very comfortable behind.
Shooting 115 berger vld . The other is a 300 win mag that I have only taken out once for a deer hunt and got my deer
with it. I am shooting 165 grain berger vld. I got drawn for Elk this year and Really considering using the 257 mag. I will
keep my shots to under 400. yards. What do you guys think? Scott