Handgun Bullets For Hunting NA

gbflyer

WKR
Joined
Feb 20, 2017
Messages
1,819
Having established that N American game animals are not armor plated, could we have a discussion about handgun bullet choices? I am specifically interested in the use of hard cast and deep penetrating projectiles that seems to be a prerequisite. Cartridge choice may not be as important. As an example I am aware of cases where the big “Bear stopper” 10mm loads are penciling through deer or elk or black bear with undue suffering and loss of animal. What is the better way?
 

Slickhill

FNG
Joined
Aug 21, 2024
Messages
42
Handgun bullets wound differently than rifle bullets due to their low, by comparison, velocity. They do not give the big cone shaped grape jelly wound channels.

I shoot almost exclusively cast bullets through my handguns. Not the super hard commercial cast stuff that is prone to leading and marginal accuracy. Bullets cast and sized to fit the gun by me, generally about half as hard as the commercial stuff. They will rivet on heavy bone but rarely give any magazine add type expansion.

Some things to keep in mind for hunting with this type of bullet. The wider the meplat or flat on the nose the better for the most part, full wadcutters do not remain stable at longer distances so there has to be a give and take between the widest meplat and having enough ogive to remain stable at distance. The edge or transition between the meplat and the ogive should be sharp for best performance, a relatively hard bullet with a sharp cornered meplat will produce better wounding than a jacketed bullet of the same general shape because the jacketed bullet has a rounded edge. Velocity doesn’t need to be super high, 1100-1200fps is plenty and is more shootable than atomic 1500fps loads. The lower speeds will produce incredible penetration and the flat nosed bullets will most often do so in a long straight line.

I think of handgun hunting as similar to bow hunting as far as the wounding mechanics go. Wounds will be long and narrow without the extra caused by high speed bullet fragments. The main difference being that a proper handgun bullet doesn’t care if there’s bones in the way. In fact intentionally shooting for large bones is a good way to get some bullet upset and or some bone fragments as secondary projectiles.

Find a copy of Veral Smith’s book, “jacketed performance with cast bullets”. There’s a lot of minutiae that won’t interest the non bullet caster, but there’s also much good info on wounding mechanics and some easy to run experiments to better understand for yourself.
 

Wrench

WKR
Joined
Aug 23, 2018
Messages
6,540
Location
WA
1 bear via 10mm 200gr xtp.

1 car hit bull elk via 10mm 200gr hardcast.

1 bear and 1 buck via .429 240gr xtp.

1 buck via .429 300gr xtp


1deer via .452 360gr wide meplat.

All died very quickly and were easy to find. I wouldn't change a thing with any of them.
 
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