These are so hard to understand…. Math calculations of nonsensical BS is a much better “visualization”. Give or take.
168gr Amax-
View attachment 848458
180gr Accubond-
View attachment 848459
168gr Barnes-
View attachment 848460
Which one would be better here?
168gr AMAX-
View attachment 848461
180gr Accubond-
View attachment 848462
168gr Barnes-
View attachment 848463
Note: image overlays included any actual permanent tissue damage caused by the temporary cavities.
most of us here understand these shades of death, excellent illustration and appreciate the work you put into the last two posts, it shows what I'm also trying to show, in pictures....but we also read words in magazines, look at the objective numbers in the magazines, and use calculators to look at our own options or desires for many bullet related activities....but not this
any numbers to that?
any standardized numbers and ability to compare to these temporary and permanent wounds? any numbers to show expected rate of drt vs 100 yard runners? how far does each one expect to run from each bullet type? silly questions right? subjective nonsense because it's shades of death...we need to look at the bullet if we want to objectify and make comparable to each other
is there standard impact velocity there? what are the parameters of each gel test?
and got the rest of the bullet library there? at same impact velocities?
and is that the best way to show it to people? or could there be a way to put numbers to that?,
from gel like I was explaining to remove any need for illustrations? which for newbies would be a great compliment but once you understand illustrations of damage in ft/lbs/inch every 25 ft/lbs you won't need illustrations anymore and can just run from the numbers, do you want a 13", 18", 36" cartridge? what damage cone along that travel do you want? 50/100/150 ft/lbs? ie; 'what are you hunting?' 'how quickly do you want them to drop?' 'here's what we see works the best'...by numbers, not illustrations, not subjective pass alongs
so I'm not trying to argue with you Form, you bring photographic memory info from tons of research and observation, others bring things too, there isn't a one stop shop for the info
we've come part way but we can make this more objective than subjective and it wouldn't be that hard, we have not explored 'rate of change' of the actual bullet in a standard used to compare all other bullets, and we do a piss poor job of talking about 'work'(energy transfer) going from 'it's irrelevant' to 'maximum wallop is best' lol, which would give us numbers to work with instead of illustrations?
I don't have to sell it. Every thread explains it. All over the map with almost entirely subjective interpretations and the odd data point that is only part of the equation....lets finish the equations and get all the numbers we can see to make useful.
All those examples need to be in standard testing parameters (same impact velocity or a blend of two different impact velocities). They need to have final penetration length, final sd, and therefore rate of change can be calculated on the bullet family, and so can the work transfer rate. Actual Numbers, not illustrations leaving to wild and varied interpretations.
Bullet does work over distance, how much work? How much distance? Over what range of impact velocities?
We still have a ways to go, and our evolution is still on the horizontal part of the curve lol. Maybe we're on the verge of turning the curve vertical now?
