Q_Sertorius
WKR
- Joined
- Jun 1, 2024
- Messages
- 3,405
I honestly don't know what point you are trying to make.Regardless, the 45gn Tsx from earlier this year clipped a singular lung and I found the pig less than 40 yards from where I shot it. Yet a bullet weighing more than 4x as much and traveling 1000fps faster at impact than the 45 did at the muzzle performed worse. This isn’t an argument about shot placement because I’ve proved you wrong. Go watch the video of the 110ttsx shot again. Under your logic and with that pig broadside I would have entirely missed both lungs yet that pig dropped on the spot with no spinal damage. Now full transparency that pig got back up and died 30 yards from where it “dropped”. But regardless if all 3 of the shots I am referring to are “marginal” shots, the one that should have had the absolute most margin of error failed. It shouldn’t matter whether I lost the blood trail 10 yards or 10 miles. The bullet didn’t do what it was supposed to do
I am not casting aspersions on you as a hunter, shooter, tracker, whatever.
I am not defending the Hammer bullet. I don't care what bullet you use.
Some animals will die more easily and quickly than others. Anyone with a large sample size of killing will see some anomalies. "Good bullets" are those that perform more consistently in producing massive damage to the vitals. But even "good bullets" in the right spot don't guarantee a DRT hit. A 10-second death sprint is pretty usual for a good hit on a deer. And some percentage of animals are tougher, have more will to live, get a bigger adrenaline spike, whatever, and go further.
I am just calling it like I see it. That wasn't a traditional broadside angle like we would all love to get every time. Assuming that your hit is exactly where it appears to be on slow motion (and where AI thinks it hit), it wasn't where I would have tried to put the bullet on a hog. I would like to put my shot lower and more forward on a hog. Particularly at that angle. At best, the shot clipped that hog's right lung, high. I've seen animals hit through only one lung run a long way. I've seen animals hit high through both lungs run a surprising way (not 1.3 miles though). Worst case scenario, the shot narrowly missed the lung. I cannot say that for certain, one way or the other, without looking at the wound.
What I can say, however, based on all the indications - from the video, to the description of the reported blood trail, to the 1.3 mile track without recovering him - is that you definitely didn't get both lungs. Even a 62-grain .224 FMJ through both lungs will kill something like a hog in less than the time it takes a lung-shot animal to run 1.3 miles (unless he had a Corpsman get to work on him within a couple of minutes). I rate the possibility of a Corpsman patching him up as highly unlikely. So, he must not have been hit through both lungs.