Stinky Coyote
WKR
yes but showing the extremes shows us the perspectives the fastest and keeps things the least muddy in these discussions...the subjective of the 416 vs 270 goat is that the 416 should have turned the goat into a canoe looking at energy values but just poked a couple unimpressive holes...but it's the .270 that flattens them as if hit by lightning....and energy has nothing to do with it, nothing makes it clearer than examples like thisThe example of the guy with the 416 shooting a mountain goat, only illustrates that the cartridge/bullet for that application was most likely a poor choice. The majority of 416 bullets are heavily constructed controlled expansion, large in caliber and heavy in weight. Mountain goats have relatively thin body widths. Lighter weight cartridges/bullets with faster bullet expansion characteristics are going to be preferable. Case in point is the guy shooting the .270 WIn.
Discussing SD's with a frame of reference to shooting SOLID bullets out of a 6.5 CM versus a 375 H&H, seems irrelevant to a discussion where we're talking about hunting North American big game, in the Long Range forum.
The key focal points, from my perspective, are to pick a cartridge and bullet combination that are as versatile/well-rounded as possible, considering the target animal and most likely shot yardages. In order to do that; two of the very important factors that need to be considered are energy at the target and the design characteristics of the bullet.
well not in how we measure energy anyway, we can't yet quantify objectively how many ft/lbs per inch over what distance the 416 would do vs the .270 to show why the .270 is a far better choice for a goat and the 416 for a rhino, we will see this one day though, I bet guys are working on it right now
here's my view of that example, the .270 was able to dump 100 ft/lbs per inch over 20" so majority of work landed inside the animal and flattened it, the 416 was able to dump a fractional amount per inch but could do that through 4 goats lined up lol...but being there was only one goat all the work went into the mountain side and the goat took a minute to die while the mountain still probably feels the sting to this day lol
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