I'm having a hard time wrapping my head around one element of the Hammer's design -- the fact that the petals are designed to break off. I can certainly see how that would aid in terminal effect, but what about those fragments ending up in your meat? Compare it to lead. Yes a lead bullet will fragment (lets not start a debate here please!) and you could ingest that lead. But the fragments are so small and lead is softer, so other than the theoretical potential for blood absorption (again, no debates here), any bigger pieces would likely just pass right through you harmlessly.
Now contrast that with copper from Hammers. I've seen the ballistic gel test vids and those copper pieces are not small. They also seem to travel several inches and can spread off in different directions from the bullet's core. Seems like there would be a decent chance that these fragments could wind up in your meat, several inches from bullet impact. Now what if you ingest these pieces of copper? That sure doesn't seem good in your gut!
Not an issue? Are these fragments easy to identify with bloodshot meat around them so you can cut or pick them out? Can someone increase my comfort level that this is not an issue? With factual info or logic? I did reach out to Steve with this question and he kindly responded saying he's seen fragments while processing meat, but never had any end up in packaged meat. That's just one man too (arguably with a bias, though his response did seem 100% honest) and it still seems like there's a chance to get pieces in your meat if your butcher isn't careful. And I don't know if I've ever seen a careful butcher! Steve did say (and I appreciate his honesty) that the pieces can spread from the shot site, which worried me, but didn't seem to concern him. I think I'm looking to broaden that sample before I gain enough comfort with them. Help me out here. I'm sure I'm overthinking it, but I'd like concrete reasoning as to why it's nothing to worry about, if it's not. Thoughts?
Now contrast that with copper from Hammers. I've seen the ballistic gel test vids and those copper pieces are not small. They also seem to travel several inches and can spread off in different directions from the bullet's core. Seems like there would be a decent chance that these fragments could wind up in your meat, several inches from bullet impact. Now what if you ingest these pieces of copper? That sure doesn't seem good in your gut!
Not an issue? Are these fragments easy to identify with bloodshot meat around them so you can cut or pick them out? Can someone increase my comfort level that this is not an issue? With factual info or logic? I did reach out to Steve with this question and he kindly responded saying he's seen fragments while processing meat, but never had any end up in packaged meat. That's just one man too (arguably with a bias, though his response did seem 100% honest) and it still seems like there's a chance to get pieces in your meat if your butcher isn't careful. And I don't know if I've ever seen a careful butcher! Steve did say (and I appreciate his honesty) that the pieces can spread from the shot site, which worried me, but didn't seem to concern him. I think I'm looking to broaden that sample before I gain enough comfort with them. Help me out here. I'm sure I'm overthinking it, but I'd like concrete reasoning as to why it's nothing to worry about, if it's not. Thoughts?