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How fast must an animal die for it to be an ethical kill?The idea that a .223 is just as good as a 300 win mag to hunt big game, is asinine. Will it kill it, yeah, sure. Is that really what a sportsman and someone who supposedly cares about game wants though, just to kill it? I like giving animals a quick death and minimal suffering.
If you can't be accurate with a real man's rifle, that's fine. No need to come up with all this fanfare to somehow suggest that what you are doing is somehow better or smarter though. It's laughable and is right there with skinny jeans, IPAs, and balsamic drizzles.
When I try to wrap me head around these concepts I try to think of extremes. A feather vs. a rock. Throwing a 6.5 creedmor with my hands vs. firing it out of a gun. So, yup mass, velocity and therefore energy absolutely matter.When people say energy (m*v squared) doesn’t matter do they realize a bullet without velocity sits on the shelf and a bullet without mass doesn’t exist? I’m a little tongue in cheek but I can’t help it.
Maybe we should say, in the context of this discussion, that energy alone is not the end all be all of wounding. But a 30 caliber match bullet in general creates more wounding when entering an animal at the same speed as a similar 223 match bullet. Look at forms photos of 30 caliber match bullet wounds. They’re huge. And the grizzly I shot last fall with an 165 sst at 2900 fps had a wound cavity that would make a 77 grain tmk blush and surrender. Of course, since most people are shooting little deersies and antelopes a 223 match bullet does plenty. Bows kill too.
Looks like we had a similar thought at the same timeThrowing a 6.5 creedmor with my hands vs. firing it out of a gun
If energy didn’t matter I could throw a match bullet at an animal and get the desired result.
I agree (not that you’re a wuss, but to shoot what you can shoot reliably). I use a 30-06.That's why at the end of the day shoot what you can shoot comfortably and reliably. Me, I'm a wuss. I use a 308. No 300 win mag for me
The day a rifle cartridge makes a "real man" is the day I no longer value being a man. But, at least you are honest on how cheaply you hold manhood.If you can't be accurate with a real man's rifle, that's fine.
It was never my intent to do so. If you go back and read the OP, the intent was to try to resolve the apparent inconsistency/contradiction in these two statements:You haven’t explained in a coherent way why foot pounds of “energy” matters to the discussion.
OK. I have not made any statements about minimum ft-lb thresholds for killing deer, elk, or anything. So, that is not the conversation and context of this thread. And I may be somewhat of a Fudd, but I'm OK with that.And, the “zealous defense” of the claim really is a reaction to the fudds who say “you need 1500 foot pounds to ethically kill an elk.”
In THAT conversation and context, energy is irrelevant to ethically killing an elk.
See the first response above in this post...again...I was picking on the apparent inconsistency in those two statements.I thought there may have been some greater point to the discussion, but this wasn’t about much more than you picking at the “zealously defended” claim of something. It’s a rhetoric trick to create the absolute position and then pick at it with “I have questioned the claim that energy is irrelevant”.
Sufficient energy is needed to ensure proper projectile expansion. Beyond that energy is irrelevant. The resulting tissue damage from proper projectile placement is key.
Plenty of elk have been killed with a 6mm projectile having “only” 80 ft-lbs of KE. Right through the heart or lungs and they die. Every single time.
I agree. Over stating a position is a good way to undermine a strong argument.I simply think that it is somewhat of an overstatement to claim that "energy is totally irrelevant". And it doesn't even help your case to do so. That's why I said I don't see how the argument for small calibers rises and falls with that claim. You can easily prove your case without taking that "absolute position" on energy. And taking that absolute position probably hurts your case with the Fudds rather than helps it.
Not enough information to determine that.Borrowing these from the original poster. Which one has the most ft/lbs of energy?
Not enough information to determine that.![]()
You can throw a bullet 1800fps?When people say energy (m*v squared) doesn’t matter do they realize a bullet without velocity sits on the shelf and a bullet without mass doesn’t exist? I’m a little tongue in cheek but I can’t help it.
If energy didn’t matter I could throw a match bullet at an animal and get the desired result.
Maybe we should say, in the context of this discussion, that energy alone is not the end all be all of wounding. But a 30 caliber match bullet in general creates more wounding when entering an animal at the same speed as a similar 223 match bullet. Look at forms photos of 30 caliber match bullet wounds. They’re huge. There’s more mass to be fragmented. The grizzly I shot last fall with an 165 sst at 2900 fps had a wound cavity that would make a 77 grain tmk blush and surrender. Of course, since most people are shooting little bambies and antelopes a 223 match bullet does plenty. Bows kill too, but often slower than my preference.
No. That is exactly my pointYou can throw a bullet 1800fps?