Taprack9
FNG
Since I started using copper I never looked back. Great results and no chance of lead contamination for myself or the critters.
Thats kinda my dilemma too. They are long for the weight which could cause mag box length issues, especially in my WSM.
There is no health concern there. Depending on how successful I am in a given year, 50% - 90% of the meat I eat has been shot with lead bullets. I've had annual lead level testing for my job for about the last 15 years and it has never been elevated.But, the lighter copper mono you mention retains the same weight and is effectively the same in terms of terminal ballistics as a heavier lead core bullet. Only difference I've found is copper being more consistent.
I started a thread on this probably almost a year ago and received a lot of really vitriolic responses. I actually learned a lot. For one thing, I am a myopic, communist-loving sheep who wants to destroy America by shooting copper bullets. Also, eating a little powdered lead just puts hair on your chest. No health concern there.
There is no health concern there. Depending on how successful I am in a given year, 50% - 90% of the meat I eat has been shot with lead bullets. I've had annual lead level testing for my job for about the last 15 years and it has never been elevated.
I have numbers, you have maybes. Show me data because I don't care what sounds good in your head.Your individual blood lead levels coming back normal at the time of a test does not mean there is no concern. 1, you may be conservative with the meat you trim from around a wound channel. Others may be less so. 2, the amount of lead deposited in game and the distance it travels from a wound channel vary greatly by firearm and individual circumstance. Just because your game doesn't have it does not mean that others' won't. 3, having normal blood lead levels on one test a year does not mean there is no concern. Your body gets rid of lead from your bloodstream relatively quickly. So, if you have a large exposure event and then get tested two or three months later, your test will indicate that your levels are normal even though you have, in all probability, sustained some degree of neurological and/or endocrine damage.
This is getting to be a cliché, but it's true. The etymology of the word "plumbing" comes from the Latin "plomb." It means "lead." A lot of historians now think that the collapse of the Roman empire had to do with them drinking out of lead pipes and eating off lead plates. Just because you can't see its effects happening in front of you doesn't mean they're not happening.
I have numbers, you have maybes. Show me data because I don't care what sounds good in your head.
Neither the WHO or Icahn articles addressed lead exposure from eating wild game, and every single person in the ND study had lead levels in the normal range. People have been eating meat shot with lead bullets for going on 400 years, surely who you can point to someone who had a problem....if it is a problem.Sure thing! Here is the WHO's explanation of why your original assertion that "There is no concern there" is wrong. It also goes in depth explaining why even low levels of detected lead are a concern:
Lead poisoning
Lead is a naturally occurring toxic metal found in the Earth’s crust. Its widespread use has resulted in extensive environmental contamination, human exposure and significant public health problems in many parts of the world.www.who.int
And here is one by the North Dakota department of health, not exactly a liberal bastion intent on outlawing lead ammo or anything, linking game animals shot with lead to higher blood lead levels in hunters:
And here is one explaining why a normal blood lead level test is inconclusive and does not provide much useful information about cumulative exposure. If you want to know what your lifetime exposure has been, and how much damage has been done to your body, you need a bone test.
I can find my old blood lead level tests from when I was active duty and the letter written by the physician explaining exactly the phenomenon outlined above if you'd like. It's in my medical record somewhere. To reiterate, I have no dog in this fight; you're the one eating your game meat. Just passing along some information that would probably help a lot of people if it were more widely disseminated.
Neither the WHO or Icahn articles addressed lead exposure from eating wild game
I've had annual lead level testing for my job for about the last 15 years and it has never been elevated. There is no health concern there.
From the article you linked:True. Those links were included simply to point out that the assumptions you made initially, such as
are totally wrong. One person getting blood lead level tests within normal parameters means virtually nothing. Since you are interested in reading another study about hunter blood lead levels, here is one. I'll link however many more you want.
Lead Bullet Fragments in Wild Game
Information about possible lead contamination of wild game meat.portal.ct.gov
Again, feel free to disregard all of this. You're the one affected by what's in your food.
To date, there have not been any cases of human illnesses linked to lead particles in hunter-harvested venison.
From the article you linked:
Got anything that says eating game meat harvested with lead bullets is dangerous?
So, my lead levels testing normal despite eating lead bullet shot meat means virtually nothing, but you hang your hat on hand wringing supposition and articles that say no damage has ever been done to anyone?
Bonded and copper bullets are the best option for close to medium range hunting in my experience, beyond 500 yards I definitely like Bergers for the bigger wound channel and that's all I'll use for LR hunting.Thanks for bringing this thread back up, in my original post back on page one I was switching from Berger Hybrids 215 gr out of a .300WM to Nosler Accubond 180 gr.
After some testing and kills with the Accubond, I am thinking about moving back to the Bergers. I was looking for more penetration out of the Nosler but achieved the exact opposite. All animals died and none went far but I didn't get a single pass through which was never the case with the Bergers.
There is something to be said for a bullet expending all of its energy inside of an animal but the Bergers caused more internal damage and were complete pass-throughs compared to the Accubond, which to me was surprising.
Sure, dead is dead, but if you have an option of a higher BC bullet that provides an exit hole and more internal damage, then that is a no-brainer for me. Wish I would have thought about that before I sold (200) 215 Hybrids on here.
This was my train of thought as well and the reason I switched to Accubonds. While I initially went the Berger route for long-range, the 6-8 animals that I have taken with them were all sub 200 yards and they were devastating on all of em' with complete pass-throughs.Bonded and copper bullets are the best option for close to medium range hunting in my experience, beyond 500 yards I definitely like Bergers for the bigger wound channel and that's all I'll use for LR hunting.
I have seen thin jacketed bullets completely grenade on close range shoulder shots, and in a few cases the animal covered miles of ground.
That's why I use partitions and monos when hunting timber, I've literally put a 140 partition through the heavy leg bone in the front shoulder of an elk.
That bull went 30 yards and died, the bullet blew through both shoulders and was lodged in the opposite leg bone.
Pretty hard to argue with that
I've only used the Accubond LR version but it was super explosive on my wife's bull last season, she shot him 3 times in the shoulder and he still required a chase.This was my train of thought as well and the reason I switched to Accubonds. While I initially went the Berger route for long-range, the 6-8 animals that I have taken with them were all sub 200 yards and they were devastating on all of em' with complete pass-throughs.
The 4-5 animals that I have taken with Accubonds only one exited in the same sub 200-yard ranges which has me 2nd guessing my original premise.
Or would that be 3rd guessing...lol.