Ballpark? Yeah.You’re thinking about 120 from POI to where it was found? Thanks.
shot placement
This has always been weird to me too.A bullet “penciling through” and killing slowly but potentially leaving a blood trail versus a bullet destroying the insides and killing quickly but maybe doesn’t leave a blood trail (rare) is a weird comparison.
I get that. My pass through arrow killed my bull and he only went 30 yards. He didn’t bleed out very much though.Fill up a gallon zip lock with water, seal it shut. Poke a hole in one side and watch the water come out. Then put another hole in the other side and watch.
Always prefer pass thru unless I know for sure I can hit the spine or break down the shoulders.
MERICA!The only hunters I know of who don't want any expansion are dangerous game people who are shooting stuff that leaves the barrel at a half inch anyway, with a flat nearly caliber diameter nose. Myself and the other people I know who want penetration also want expansion, just controlled so that it doesn't stop early. I've always liked what partitons do to animals.
We have so many options! A man can use a .223 with match bullets and it be effective. He can use a .500 jeffrey with solids and it be effective. He can use a .50 bmg Barrett and have 7,500 grains of bullet in the magazine ready to fly. I love America so much.
initial hole is often high and won't leak any blood since the entire body cavity would have to fill up first.
I grew up archery hunting whitetails in the Midwest and for some reason I was always shooting them high. There was usually very little blood if they’re hit with a high double lung shot. In my experience, they’d go on a death run after the shot for 1-200 yds and then pile up when they ran out of oxygen. This only takes 10-15 seconds so all the blood is still contained inside the body cavity and unable to be pushed out the hole.I see this posted a lot. I don't understand this. The animals circulatory system is pressurized as long as it's alive and able to move, and lung holes always produce blood from the nose and mouth. Seems it would have to bleed externally?
Its commonly said so people must see it happen often. I just have never been able to understand how it could actually happen.
I’ve told this story a couple times in threads mostly related to mono bullets discussions. A few years ago I decided to try barnes ttsx bullets in my 300wm. I shot a good bull from 478, double lunged, in Montana. Upon impact the bull hunched up, spun 180°, and ran into the woods about 60 yards away. The shot looked like it broke perfectly but the reaction from the bull and the speed at which it ran was concerning. We trudged up the steep hill through 8” of snow to where the bull was when I shot. Not a single drop of blood anywhere! We followed the tracks into the woods and found the bull laying about 40 yards into the timber….not a single drop of blood the entire time. Cutting up that bull revealed a small entrance and exit. Just because you get two holes doesn’t mean you’ll get a blood trail.I prefer a pass through, cause the blood trails are way better with two holes.
In my experience, it does with what I’m shooting. It’s very rare that I don’t get pass throughs. It’s also very, very rare that I don’t get blood immediately from pass throughs, but I’m 100% on no blood trails with TMKs. Everyone I’ve shot with TMKs have ran at least 50 yards. I’ll stick to what works for me and that’s pass throughs.I’ve told this story a couple times in threads mostly related to mono bullets discussions. A few years ago I decided to try barnes ttsx bullets in my 300wm. I shot a good bull from 478, double lunged, in Montana. Upon impact the bull hunched up, spun 180°, and ran into the woods about 60 yards away. The shot looked like it broke perfectly but the reaction from the bull and the speed at which it ran was concerning. We trudged up the steep hill through 8” of snow to where the bull was when I shot. Not a single drop of blood anywhere! We followed the tracks into the woods and found the bull laying about 40 yards into the timber….not a single drop of blood the entire time. Cutting up that bull revealed a small entrance and exit. Just because you get two holes doesn’t mean you’ll get a blood trail.
I went back to Bergers and haven’t had any tracking jobs since. I might not always get a blood trail with fragmenting bullets either, but I watch them die within sight.