- Banned
- #21
They say, you want all the energy to expel inside the animal. Which means it doesn't exit, it stops on the aft side skin. Once it exits, yes there is a bleeding hole, but no more energy is used to put the game down.
That happened with accubonds on my Moose. I'm not a ballistic expert, but it seems to make sense.
I will tell you, since my shot wasn't perfect, and it was a gut shot, I was scooping out handfuls of grass. It probably wasn't the bullet expansion, but hydraulic shock that exploded the stomach.
Like groundhogs day...guy makes a crap shot on a big-game animal with a good bullet, its the bullets fault. Doesn't matter what bullet you're using, shooting them in the guts, twice isn't going to change the outcome.
Energy is a myth and the theory behind the "expend all is energy in the animal" is the biggest of all.
As to the accubonds? I fired exactly 5 of the 140 grain variety last year from 7-08 at big-game, one pronghorn, one whitetail buck, one bighorn ram, and 2 cow elk...5 dead critters with ZERO problems and exit holes in every one of them. I didn't shoot them in the guts though either.
I cant say how many animals I've shot with them or seen shot with them, but certainly over 100...no problems and they're a great bullet.