FNG is a status assigned based on the number of posts made as opposed to time on the website or experience in the field. I retain FNG status because I rarely post because of the nonsense that so often ensues when opinions differ. The FNG moniker applied by another user was clearly done so as an insult, and subsequent attempts to justify immature behavior as “well it’s in your username” falls quite flat. To those users who expressed valid, differing viewpoints. Bravo. Academic debate is useful and educational. To those who chose to resort to ad hominem attacks, well, I challenge you to ask yourself how that kind of conduct is working out for us as a community and as a country. Last I looked around, the normalization of bad public conduct has done little for any of us.
Hey, I started this thread. To understand. You don’t need all 98 pages or whatever to understand.
Pro Tip: you don’t have time to read, but you’re willing to start by calling folks out. Bad decision making in the field? Your post has some anecdotes and other often repeated arguments that people actually put to the test, in the field. It’s disrespectful to just come in hit blasting everyone. Hard to understand why you’d expect people not to call you out?
Couple takeaways I’d suggest digging into.
- accuracy and impacts of recoil. Hit rate based on bullet bc, speed, and skill.
- ability to put shots down range, accurately, quickly, and from awkward positions.
- wound channel differences between different bullet types and maximizing “killing” over “weight retention.”
- the quartering thing. Always a go to - there’s nothing wrong with understanding limitations and applying them where prudent.
- I don’t care how big the bullet is, or margin for error, or how “tough” it is. You have to hit vitals or bleed something out to kill it. You have to hit it to do that. Maximizing that is worthwhile over raw “power” or energy.
If you’ve been on here a while you’d know that field experience > feelings. I’d also say that limited field experience with what you know well doesn’t invalidate people that have tried these more effective “killing” bullets. Just because you’ve been doing something a long time doesn’t mean you can’t learn.
I’ve seen kills making me think “why do you need more” for cartridge and bullet, and I’ve seen rodeos with big old cartridges. I suggest people consider smaller ones where it works for them. Where rokslide can get a tad too “strong” or focused at times is immediately telling everyone they are crazy for not doing it that way - but honestly that’s really tailed off. It’s another reason I started this thread. You should really look at the “why” rather than waste time arguing.