accudongs.....Our crew kills enough elk that I have a pretty good idea on what works. Arguing with successful guys about hypothetical shit isn't going to make more elk dead in your future. View attachment 648026
It's funny how long we have been lied to by the fake news media... AKA Hunting Magazines.Here's WAY under 1500 ft/lbs on a bull from a 140 6.5......couldn't ask for more. Broken off side scapula and through the close side.
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Perfect, end of thread/discussion, shut it down
Thank you for this answer! I appreciate that you took the time to explain all of that to me. It really interests me as well!I have posted this elsewhere but have been interested in terminal ballistics and how the variables play together. In general it is a complex topic how a live target interacts to a wound but the physics and fluid dynamics are pretty well understood about how things work. Since asked about energy and how the science works…
The wound volume potential is directly proportional to the kimetic energy of the bullet. The energy is determined by mass x v^2. A bigger wound may or may not cause something to die more quickly. A lot of guys say energy doesn't matter at all, but a better statement to me is once you have enough in right spot more does not matter. As an aside, A pet peeve of mine is the “arrow example” of why energy doesn’t matter. A sharp broadhead tipped arrow going 100 fps kills quite well. If using arrow as an analogy I guess velocity doesn’t matter either..
Penetration is proportional to velocity x sectional density. This is terminal sectional density NOT starting sectional density. For ex, monos penetrate deeply because they have higher terminal sectional density and tend to lose velocity at slower rate due to less frontal area i.e. through less expanded diameter, space in between petals, or blowing off petals entirely. This is also why something like a nosler partition will penetrate more deeply than equivilant starting weight swift aframe. Penetration is important as you need enough to at least damage vital stuff.
Energy is a big factor in termporary cavity. Temporary cavity is called temporary not because of the damage it causes but because it happens in a millisecond in the wake of the bullet as material is blasted away from the passing of the bullet. It can be many times larger than bullet diameter and some tissue is simply blasted away and gone, some torn by stretching, and some snaps back. The wider the cavity is the more tearing happens vs stretching. I have seen various velocity levels people think this starts happening but nothing conclusive in real literature. However increased wounding almost always happens with high velocity/energy hunting cartridges and not so much in say defensive handgun rounds.
The diameter of the temporary cavity is proportional to the rate of energy transfer from bullet to animal at any given instance during penetration. The rate of energy transfer is basically drag which is proportional to frontal area and v^2. This is why smaller faster bullets can at times make wider wounds than slower wider bullets. This is also why you tend to see the “football” shape wounds in gel/game
Bullet fragmentation is a damage multiplier for temporary cavity. Tissues that only stretch will tear to shreds when have holes from fragmentation. In this regard high velocity can show much bigger diameter wounds than larger diameter slower bullets since not only promotes higher drag/energy transfer but also bullet fragmentation and expansion. While fragmentation may be good for increasing wounding it can also be bad if decreased penetration (ie your projectile loses too much terminal sectional density) to the point the significant wounding does not happen in vital area
The final wound cavity is the size of whatever is destroyed by the bullet directly crushing it or tissue damage as a result of the temporary cavity. One thing a lot of people are not aware of is that much like temporary cavity, a slow bullet may push its way through tissue and once passes through tissue snaps back to smaller diameter wound channel or pushes organs out of way vs damaging.
Bullet constuction predominately determines how the energy is transefered to the target to do the wounding. Contruction impacts terminal shape of the bullet which plays into penetration/wounding. Fragmenting designs may have wide shallow wounds. Flat fmj may have long narrow wounds. Lot of stuff in between. All a tradeoff
So - think how these apply to your favorite cartridge, bullet, the shots you take, etc… and see if it makes sense. As you can see there is a complex system of events going on a bullet traverses the target, changes shape, and mass. You can sort of tweak how prefer this to happen based on your preference of terimal performance
Lo
Yes, that is basically it. To maximize penetration you want to minimize velocity loss and keep terminal SD high during penetration. The solid accompishes this since does not expand (which increases drag/reduces SD) or lose weight during penetration (reduced SD) The caveat here is you also want a blunt or flat front end as this will tend to keep the bullet penetrating straight through shoulder stabilization. A spitzer fmj will typically flip ends and veer off or fragment.Thank you for this answer! I appreciate that you took the time to explain all of that to me. It really interests me as well!
I can’t find anything I disagree with in what you have said.
I have a follow up question for you. In the case of a dangerous game cartridge say a .470 nitro express/500 grain solid just as an example. Would it be a correct statement to say that by making the bullet solid/ hard and profiling in such a way that it can remain stable on impact we have chosen/prioritized use of the available energy to drive as far through the target as we have energy available to do so?
Thank you! That makes sense to me.Yes, that is basically it. To maximize penetration you want to minimize velocity loss and keep terminal SD high during penetration. The solid accompishes this since does not expand (which increases drag/reduces SD) or lose weight during penetration (reduced SD) The caveat here is you also want a blunt or flat front end as this will tend to keep the bullet penetrating straight through shoulder stabilization. A spitzer fmj will typically flip ends and veer off or fragment.
I am not a DG hunter but I have often read that hunters will load a strong expanding bullet for initial hopefully broadside shot on something like a buffalo to have more damage then have solids for follow on in case need to try and break animal down at bad angles. I don’t know if you could get away with something like that on an elephant or hippo as I bet even a big gun feels pretty puny facing down those behemoths
Lou
I have one more question. I understand that temporary cavity alone in terms of wounding is relatively mild in soft stretchy tissues like lungs and may be slightly (emphasis on slightly) more effective to harder organs such as the liver. A good example of this is the high speed video of a bullet striking a gel block. The energy transfer is clearly shown in the temporary cavity and while it looks very impressive, when it snaps back down after the energy has dissipated we can see that the only significant or meaningful wound in the block is the permanent wound track/tracks made by the projectile/fragments and the tears (if any are present).Thank you for this answer! I appreciate that you took the time to explain all of that to me. It really interests me as well!
I can’t find anything I disagree with in what you have said.
I have a follow up question for you. In the case of a dangerous game cartridge say a .470 nitro express/500 grain solid just as an example. Would it be a correct statement to say that by making the bullet solid/ hard and profiling in such a way that it can remain stable on impact we have chosen/prioritized use of the available energy to drive as far through the target as we have energy available to do so?