35WhelenAI
WKR
- Joined
- Nov 20, 2021
- Messages
- 1,581
Thanks for bringing up the bolded portion. A number of years ago at a show, spoke with a fellow (cannot remember his name) who had looked into how velocity inside the animal was in favor of the monos with respect to hydrostatic tissue deformation/damage throughout the full wound channel and not tapering off. Monos don't have as much surface area with petals versus a round mushroom and relatively speaking the frontal exposure of the mushroomed petals are sharper than exposed round lead. Those elements create less resistance in tissue, with more bullet speed to carry through the animal. I don't have any numbers to share, however when tissue displacement and physical damage occurs, monos tend to do it more consistently (not necessarily as dramatic due to lower frangibility of the front of the bullet at impact) for the length of the wound cavity.
I've seen that borne out in the field. The difference between a traditional cup and core bullet or partition type versus a mono is night and day when viewing the damage. Both to external tissue (meat) and internal tissue. None of those animals died any faster or slower whether the lungs were liquefied or made into big chunks.
I agree a dramatically expanding bullet typically puts animals down in a more dramatic fashion. With long range shooting I can see this as a benefit due to the time needed to get to where the animal was shot and the less it moves better. As well, long range bullets are in their expansion window for lower velocity whereas monos have slowed down to be inconsistent.
I'll leave my experience for the hunting I've done and call it good.
I've seen that borne out in the field. The difference between a traditional cup and core bullet or partition type versus a mono is night and day when viewing the damage. Both to external tissue (meat) and internal tissue. None of those animals died any faster or slower whether the lungs were liquefied or made into big chunks.
I agree a dramatically expanding bullet typically puts animals down in a more dramatic fashion. With long range shooting I can see this as a benefit due to the time needed to get to where the animal was shot and the less it moves better. As well, long range bullets are in their expansion window for lower velocity whereas monos have slowed down to be inconsistent.
I'll leave my experience for the hunting I've done and call it good.